Electronic – PCB low power self heating component separation

heatlow-powerpcb-designtemperaturethermistor

I am an EE that is fresh out of college and and starting at a smaller company, and I have a question about electronic self heating, and how to keep heat from spreading in a PCB to heat sensitive components, such as thermistors that are being used to measure ambient temperature, currently there is issues in a few designs, where the temperature inside the housing increases by half a degree C with traces run directly to the thermistor without thermal reliefs or and care to trace size. The devices I have seen having trouble are usually attempting to read ambient temperature at .25% accuracy between the ranges of -20 to 85c (currently done on some designs by having two separate boards in the enclosure with small wires run between the two)

The "hot" components are mainly the switching supply, and the MCU, in most cases for some designs I am looking at, they run at 10-20 mW, and the PCB size would generally be around 2in x 4in.

Would it be better to run large ground planes underneath these components to try and dissipate the heat on that side of the board? Or would the heat just transfer to the pcb's dielectric and heat up the thermistor that way?

Also, would it be better to run thinner traces with thermal reliefs to the thermistor to cut back on heat transfer through the traces, or would it be better to run wider traces to try and dissipate heat before getting to the thermistor?

The common value of thermistor I am looking at is a 10k-2 NTC.

Best Answer

Here is an approach to thermal isolation while maintaining some mechanical strength -(the chip is an ovenized buried zener voltage reference- it would have a urethane foam insulator over it in actual operation): As well as the wide routed slots, notice the thinner ones to the left and right and the slots to the top and bottom.

enter image description here

The copper, even 34\$\mu\$m copper, will conduct a lot of the heat, so narrower and longer traces are called for, as well as limiting the amount of laminate (thermal conductivity is proportional to cross sectional area divided by length).

The thermal conductivity of PCB laminate is anisotropic and is much higher parallel to the surface than through the PCB due to the direction of the weave in the fiberglass cloth. For that reason, rotating the pattern 45° might make a noticeable difference.

But, personally, I would V-groove or mouse-bite the PCB with a thin soldered or socketed jumper over it and then snap it off and assemble it with insulation between the two if accuracy is that important.

Or you could consider just faking it and compensate for the error due to the other circuitry either with a second sensor or a thermal model. That would make an interesting project to burn some time if you're not busy.

P.S. Sometimes you can make use of power dissipation by mounting the hot parts towards the top of a ventilated enclosure so that air at room temperature is drawn in at the bottom, over the sensor. I suspect your power levels are way too low for that to be a useful effect in this case, though.