Conformal Coating Best Practices for Reliable Electronics
Learn how to choose and apply conformal coatings, common failure modes, and test strategies to improve PCB reliability in industrial settings.

Conformal coatings extend the life of electronic assemblies by protecting against moisture, corrosion, dust, and chemical exposure. For products deployed in industrial, automotive, or harsh outdoor environments, the right coating strategy can dramatically reduce field failures.
Choosing the right coating
Acrylics: Easy to apply and reworkable, suitable for low-cost consumer and some industrial uses.
Urethanes: Excellent chemical and abrasion resistance; better for harsher chemical environments.
Silicones: Outstanding thermal stability and flexibility for assemblies exposed to wide temperature swings.
Parylene: Offers a pinhole-free, uniform conformal layer via vapor deposition — ideal for high-reliability applications but costlier.
Application methods
Brushing: Simple and low-cost for small volumes or rework.
Spraying: Good for medium volumes and larger boards; requires masking for connectors.
Dip coating: Fast and consistent for high-volume runs.
Vapor deposition (Parylene): Provides uniform coverage including under components but needs specialized equipment.
Quality controls and testing
Visual inspection and thickness measurements (micrometer or non-destructive instruments).
Adhesion and cross-cut tests to verify bonding.
Salt spray and humidity tests to simulate corrosive and wet conditions.
Thermal cycling and vibration tests to ensure mechanical resilience.
Common pitfalls
Inadequate masking causing connector clogging.
Poor cure profile leading to soft or brittle coatings.
Incompatible materials causing outgassing or adhesion failure.
Over/under-thickness harming thermal dissipation or leaving gaps.
Operational recommendations
Collaborate early between design, process, and reliability teams to design for coating (clearances, masking points).
Specify test standards aligned to product environment (e.g., IPC, MIL-STD).
Automate coating and inspection where volume and reliability needs justify the investment.
Conclusion
A disciplined approach to selecting, applying, and testing conformal coatings minimizes field failures and warranty costs. For critical industrial electronics, investing in the right coating process is a cost-effective reliability strategy.




