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EMI Shielding Cover Design Guide

3 月 24, 2026
技术资讯
~5 min read

EMI Shielding Cover Design Specifications

Design Principles

The primary principle of EMI shielding cover design is: maximize shielding effectiveness while ensuring manufacturability and cost efficiency. The design process must balance the following factors:

  • Shielding Effectiveness versus aperture size
  • Material thickness versus cost
  • Grounding design complexity versus shielding reliability
  • Height clearance versus device placement

Excellent shielding cover design must work closely with PCB design and cannot be viewed as a passive afterthought.

Dimensions and Wall Thickness Specifications

External Dimensions

The external dimensions of the shielding cover should be determined based on the shielded chip or circuit area:

ParameterRecommended ValueNotes
Shielding cover lengthChip length + 2-3mmReserve 2-3mm clearance around perimeter
Shielding cover widthChip width + 2-3mmAvoid compressing surrounding components
Shielding cover heightHighest component height + 1mmReserve space for soldering and cooling
Wall thickness0.15-0.25mmTinplate preferably 0.2mm
Corner radius≥0.5mmAvoid sharp corners for ease of forming and soldering

For one-piece shielding covers, the ratio of depth to thickness (depth/thickness) should not exceed 8:1 to ensure forming accuracy.

PCB Footprint Design

Footprint Width and Spacing

  • Footprint Width: 2.0-2.5mm (single-side soldering). Too narrow causes soldering reliability issues; too wide wastes PCB space.
  • Footprint Thickness (Plating): Copper thickness ≥35µm, tin plating thickness ≥5µm to ensure soldering wettability.
  • Footprint Spacing: For two-piece shielding cover frame footprints, spacing should not exceed 5-7mm. Excessive spacing results in shielding effectiveness loss.
  • Footprint Continuity: Frame footprints should form continuous four-side contact, avoiding openings or breaks.
Critical Point: Footprint design directly affects contact resistance between shielding cover and PCB ground layer. Excessive contact resistance significantly reduces shielding effectiveness (potentially losing 5-15dB).

Grounding Design

Number of Grounding Points

The shielding cover must connect to the PCB ground layer through multiple grounding points to form a low-impedance path:

  • Frequency <1GHz: Minimum 4 grounding points, one at each corner.
  • Frequency 1-5GHz: Minimum 6-8 grounding points, one every 1.5-2cm around perimeter.
  • Frequency >5GHz: Minimum 8-12 grounding points, one every 0.8-1cm around perimeter.
  • High shielding requirements (SE>70dB): Grounding point spacing should not exceed λ/20 (where λ is the wavelength at the highest operating frequency).

Via Layout

A via array should be placed around each footprint, directly connecting to the internal ground plane:

  • Place at least 2-4 vias (0.3-0.4mm diameter) around each footprint location.
  • Via spacing 0.5-1mm, arranged in a barrier pattern.
  • All vias should connect to the main ground plane, avoiding other signal traces.
  • Total cross-sectional area of ground vias should be ≥50% of footprint area.

Aperture Rules

Maximum Aperture Size

Ventilation holes or signal apertures in the shielding cover must be strictly controlled to prevent high-frequency signal leakage. The general rule is:

Maximum Aperture Size = λ/10 (where λ is the wavelength at the highest operating frequency)

Frequency and Aperture Size Correspondence Table

FrequencyWavelengthλ/10 (Max Aperture)Practical Application
1GHz30cm3cm (30mm)Consumer electronics, WiFi
2.4GHz12.5cm1.25cm (12.5mm)WiFi 6, Bluetooth
5GHz6cm6mm5G n78, WiFi 6E
10GHz3cm3mmMillimeter-wave, 28GHz
28GHz1.07cm1.07mm5G mmWave
Engineering Note: The λ/10 rule is theoretical. Actual design should account for process tolerances (±0.1mm), often using λ/12 or stricter rules for safety margin.

Height Clearance and Component Placement

Internal Shielding Cover Height

  • Highest Internal Component Height: Measure the maximum height of all components (chips, capacitors, resistors, etc.) in the shielded area.
  • Recommended Clearance: Reserve ≥0.5-1mm between shielding cover inner top and highest component.
  • Soldering Height: Height of shielding cover bottom footprint to PCB surface is approximately 0.3-0.5mm (soldering thickness), which must be considered in height calculations.
  • Cooling Consideration: For high-power chips, recommend reserving ≥2mm clearance for cooling and airflow circulation.

Thermal Management Considerations

Shielding covers may impede cooling of internal components. Design recommendations for heat-generating chips:

  • Cooling Holes: Design ventilation holes in the shielding cover interior; hole diameter must comply with λ/10 rule. Multiple small holes can be used instead of one large hole.
  • Thermal Pads: Thermal pads can be adhered inside shielding covers to improve heat transfer efficiency.
  • Material Selection: Tinplate thermal conductivity approximately 50 W/m·K, sufficient for most applications. For extreme cooling requirements, copper (thermal conductivity >400 W/m·K) can be considered.
  • External Cooling: For shielded high-power areas, add heat sinks or increase airflow outside the cover, conducting heat through the cover walls.

Design for Manufacturability Checklist (DFM)

Shielding Cover Geometry

External dimensions within manufacturing capability (minimum feature 0.2mm, tolerance ±0.1mm)
Corner radius ≥0.5mm, avoiding sharp corners
Uniform wall thickness, depth-to-thickness ratio <8:1
All apertures ≥0.3mm diameter (minimum for stamping)

Soldering Design

Footprint width 2.0-2.5mm, sufficient soldering area
Footprint spacing ≤5-7mm, ensuring soldering continuity
Sufficient solder paste area around footprints (no placement component obstruction)
Two-piece shielding cover lid contact springs properly designed with adequate contact pressure

Grounding and Shielding

Grounding point quantity matches frequency, spacing ≤5-7mm
Via array around each grounding point connects to ground plane
Aperture size <λ/10, verified through shielding effectiveness calculation
Frame and lid contact surfaces have complete plating, no oxidation

Assembly and Maintenance

Height design appropriate, reserves ≥0.5mm clearance
Two-piece shielding cover easy to disassemble with adequate clip strength
Repair-friendly design supporting multiple disassembly cycles
Cooling requirements met (aperture diameter, clearance, thermal path)

Common Design Defects and Improvement Solutions

Defect 1: Insufficient Shielding Effectiveness

Symptom: Measured shielding effectiveness far below calculated values (loss >10dB).

Causes:

  • Insufficient grounding points, excessive spacing
  • Poor footprint contact, excessive contact resistance
  • Aperture size exceeds specifications
  • Poor material conductivity (oxidation, contamination)

Solution: Increase grounding points, reduce spacing to 2-3mm; inspect soldering quality; reduce aperture size; use gold or nickel plating to improve conductivity.

Defect 2: Soldering Cracks or Delamination

Symptom: Shielding cover separates during rework or testing; footpads crack.

Causes:

  • Footprints too small, insufficient soldering strength
  • Improper soldering process parameters (temperature, time)
  • Material thermal expansion coefficient mismatch (CTE mismatch)

Solution: Increase footprint width to 2.5mm; optimize soldering temperature curve; use materials more compatible with shielding cover (FR-4 CTE≈16ppm/K, closer to copper-nickel).

Summary and Design Recommendations

Shielding cover design is a systematic engineering process requiring comprehensive consideration from component selection, PCB layout, soldering process to test verification. Designers should reference this guide and provide complete DFM checklists when communicating with suppliers to ensure design intent is accurately realized.

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What is an EMI Shielding Cover? Complete Beginner Guide
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EMI Shielding Cover Material Selection Guide
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