Predicting Fusing Time of Overloaded PCB Traces Can We Predict It at All - With Douglas Brooks, PHD and Dr. Johannes Adam - ARTECH HOUSE INSIDER

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Predicting Fusing Time of Overloaded PCB Traces Can We Predict It At ... https://blog.artechhouse.com/2021/03/04/predicting-fusing-time-of-over...

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AUTHOR INSIGHTS / SOLID STATE TECHNOLOGY

Predicting Fusing Time of Overloaded PCB Traces Can We


Predict It At All? with Douglas Brooks, PhD and Dr.
Johannes Adam
By Artech House on Thursday, March ,

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Predicting Fusing Time of Overloaded PCB Traces Can We Predict It At ... https://blog.artechhouse.com/2021/03/04/predicting-fusing-time-of-over...

When Traces Melt: Figures and (Note ) illustrate traces on two different boards. Each figure
illustrates the trace at the moment it fuses (melts) due to a significant current overload. The fusing
mechanisms are clearly different. So what was different?

Here is the first hint. Assume there is a current that is just large enough to cause the trace to melt (below
that, the trace just gets very hot but does not melt.) We call this the fusing current. In one case the trace
was subjected to a current fractionally larger than the fusing current. In the other case, the trace was
subjected to a current substantially larger than the fusing current.

Here is the second hint. Traces subjected to a current fractionally larger than the fusing current can take a
relatively long time to melt (minutes to hours). Traces subjected to very large current overloads melt much
more quickly (less than a few seconds).

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Figure – Trace at the moment of fusing.

Figure – Another trace at the moment of fusing.

Figure is an illustration of a mil wide, . Oz. trace subjected to a current of . Amps, significantly
larger than the fusing current. It fused in . seconds. The moment of fusing was underwhelming. The
flash lasted less than / of a second (one video frame) and there was otherwise little damage to the
surrounding area.

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Figure , on the other hand, is much more spectacular. It illustrates a mil wide, . Oz. trace subjected
to . Amps (approximately the fusing current). Being % wider and x thicker, this trace took a long
time to melt, approximately minutes. As the trace heated up, it began to visibly glow about seconds
before fusing. It began smoking (and ejecting smoke under pressure) some seconds before fusing.
The aroma of burning material was in the air for perhaps minutes before fusing. There was substantial
damage done to the trace and board along most of its length.

Heating Dynamics: A trace heats by I R. The higher the current (I) and/or the resistance (R), the hotter
the trace. But the trace cools by conduction through the board material, convection, and radiation. As the
trace temperature increases, the board material underneath it degrades, passing through the stages of

Tg (glass transition temperature), Td (thermal decomposition), and Delamination (Note ). Any


degradation of the underlying board material will reduce the effective cooling capacity of the material and

increase the temperature of the trace. In both figures above, the traces pass through the same stages
until the weakest spot along the trace melts (Note ). If the trace is substantially overloaded (Figure ) this
happens so quickly there is little time for the board material to heat up. Therefore, the damage to the
board itself is minimal everywhere except at the point of fusing. But in Figure , the entire trace is
subjected to significant overloading and heating for a relatively longer period of time. The board material
heats all along the trace and there is damage all along its length.

Predicting Fusing Time: So, an interesting question is, can we predict the fusing time for a PCB trace? I.

M. Onderdonk developed an equation (Equation ) bearing his name that may help. Almost nothing is
known about Onderdonk, including even his or her gender. The earliest reference to his formula appears
to be in , and applies to power line distribution (Note ). An interesting and potentially valuable
characteristic of this formula is that it includes a variable for time (Note ):

[ ] Where:

I = the current in Amps

A = the cross-sectional area in circular mils (Note )

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S = t = the time in seconds the current is applied

ΔT = the rise in temperature from the ambient or initial state

Ta = the reference temperature in oC

Onderdonk’s Equation can be rewritten to solve for time, t, as Equation :

[ ] A very important assumption in Onderdonk’s Equation is that there is no cooling. There is only I R
heating. Brooks and Adam show through many different simulations that there is a time constant
associated with trace heating and cooling and that cooling effects take some time to “kick in.” But after
the cooling effects do start impacting the trace temperature, fusing times extend out significantly, in some
cases indefinitely.

If there is a sudden increase in the current applied to a PCB trace, the cooling effects begin to
significantly impact the temperature within about . to . seconds. Within about . seconds,

Onderdonk’s Equation can predict PCB trace fusing times pretty accurately. Brooks and Adam show that
adjustments to Onderdonk’s Equation can make the equation useful for up to as much as . seconds.
Beyond that, predicting PCB trace fusing times is pretty unreliable.

Notes:

1. Figures are from a recent book by Douglas G. Brooks, PhD and Dr. Johannes Adam, PCB Design
Guide to Via and Trace Currents and Temperatures, Artech House, . See Chapter
2. For a discussion of these terms, see Note , Chapter , specifically Section . .
3. Traces and board materials are not uniform, and traces do not heat uniformly. Traces will fuse at
their weakest spot.
4. E. R. Stauffacher, “Short-time Current Carrying Capacity of Copper Wire,” General Electric Review,
Vol , No , June
5. No original publications by Onderdonk, including how he derived his formula, are known. Dr. Adam
provides a rigorous derivation of Onderdonk’s Equation in the book referenced in Note , Appendix G.
6. A circular mil is the area of a circle with a diameter of one mil. The formula is A = d . The conversion
from circular mils to mil is π/ . Normal conversions are:
mil = . circular mils

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circular mil = . mil

m = . * circular mil

circular mil = . * - m = . * - mm

About the authors:

Douglas Brooks has a BS/EE and an MS/EE from Stanford and a PhD from the University of
Washington. For the last years he has owned a small engineering service firm and written numerous
technical articles on Printed Circuit Board Design and Signal Integrity issues, and has published two
books on these topics and one on trace temperatures and currents. He has given seminars several times
a year all over the US, as well as Moscow, China, Taiwan, Japan, Canada, and most recently in Tel Aviv.
His primary focus is on making complex technical issues easily understood by those without advanced
degrees.

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Johannes Adam received a doctorate in physics from University of Heidelberg, Germany, in on a


thesis about numerical treatment of - dimensional radiation transport in moving astrophysical plasmas.
He was then employed in software companies, mainly working on numerical simulations of electronics
cooling at companies like Cisi Ingenierie S.A. , Flomerics. Ltd. and Mentor Graphics Corp. In he
founded ADAM Research and does work as a technical consultant for electronics developing companies
and as a software developer. He is the author of a simulation program called TRM (Thermal Risk

Management), designed for electronics developers and PCB designers who want to solve electro-thermal
problems at the board level. He is a member of the German chapter of IPC (FED e.V.) and engages in its
seminars about thermal topics. He is a Certified Interconnect Designer (CID). He is living in Leimen near
Heidelberg.

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