dgowans
Mechanical
- Oct 12, 2004
- 680
Can anyone point me in the direction of any research that has been done on moisture ingress through thermoplastic materials?
We've got existing products that consist of a PCB assembly sealed in a thermoplastic enclosure via a hot plate welding process. As we look to expand our product line, new enclosures are being developed and a comment was made about the research that was done (long before my time at this company) on moisture ingress through various thermoplastics and that there was a volumetric range of the enclosure for which the moisture ingress over time would be insignificant.
These devices are installed outside and have an expected field life of 20 years. The concern is (was?) that significant moisture ingress over time could lead to condensation on the electronics and cause a short. For the purpose of discussion let's assume that the seal produced with the welding process is the same as the rest of the enclosure as far as ingress is concerned. We do extensive leak testing on these enclosures and I'm not worried about an inadequate seal being a leak path.
The questions I have are:
Is the concern over moisture ingress valid?
If so:
What is the relationship between enclosure volume and acceptable moisture ingress?
What other variables factor into how much moisture will pass through the enclosure over time? Material selection seems to be obvious, although I keep going back to the validity of the concern overall.
I imagine that there will be numerous questions as to the specifics and I'll be happy to answer them as best I can. I'd be speculating about what information is relevant at this point and don't want to randomly post what I think are the key points.
We've got existing products that consist of a PCB assembly sealed in a thermoplastic enclosure via a hot plate welding process. As we look to expand our product line, new enclosures are being developed and a comment was made about the research that was done (long before my time at this company) on moisture ingress through various thermoplastics and that there was a volumetric range of the enclosure for which the moisture ingress over time would be insignificant.
These devices are installed outside and have an expected field life of 20 years. The concern is (was?) that significant moisture ingress over time could lead to condensation on the electronics and cause a short. For the purpose of discussion let's assume that the seal produced with the welding process is the same as the rest of the enclosure as far as ingress is concerned. We do extensive leak testing on these enclosures and I'm not worried about an inadequate seal being a leak path.
The questions I have are:
Is the concern over moisture ingress valid?
If so:
What is the relationship between enclosure volume and acceptable moisture ingress?
What other variables factor into how much moisture will pass through the enclosure over time? Material selection seems to be obvious, although I keep going back to the validity of the concern overall.
I imagine that there will be numerous questions as to the specifics and I'll be happy to answer them as best I can. I'd be speculating about what information is relevant at this point and don't want to randomly post what I think are the key points.