The Next Five Years of Thermal Substrates, Ceramics, and Thick-film PCBs
December 11, 2025 | Brian Buyea, RemtecEstimated reading time: 4 minutes
If you want a clean view of where thermal substrates and ceramic/thick-film electronics are headed, follow the heat. Power density is moving up and to the right across industries: EV traction inverters, fast chargers, AI data centers, radar, satellite payloads, medical imaging, and high-brightness LEDs. The next five years will be defined by designs that treat thermal performance as a first-order constraint, not an afterthought. Here’s what that means in practice.
Ceramics Move from ‘Specialty’ to ‘System Standard’
Alumina will remain the workhorse, but silicon nitride (Si₃N₄) and aluminum nitride (AlN) will grow fastest because they uniquely balance thermal conductivity, mechanical strength, and dielectric integrity for high-stress environments. Expect broader adoption of Si₃N₄ in traction inverters and aerospace power modules where fracture toughness and reliability under thermal cycling are critical, and increased use of AlN in RF and photonics where heat extraction and low dielectric loss matter. The headline trend: materials will be specified by lifecycle cost at temperature, not just by datasheet conductivity.
Copper-on-Ceramic Platforms Become the Default for Power
Direct-bonded copper (DBC) and active-metal brazed (AMB) substrates will keep gaining share vs. insulated metal substrates and FR-4 stacks in high-power segments. The driver isn’t only thermal conductivity; it’s thermo-mechanical reliability at repeated ∆T of 80–120°C. Over the next five years, we’ll see thicker copper options, hybrid copper thickness on the same tile, and finer features via laser and advanced etch methods that let power substrates also carry sensing and control traces, reducing interconnect count and parasitics.
Thick-film Printing Grows Up (Again)
Thick-film has always been the quiet workhorse for resistors, conductors, and dielectrics on ceramic. Two changes are coming. First, low-resistance copper pastes and improved barrier systems will expand copper-on-ceramic printing where silver migration or cost is a concern. Second, integrated passive networks—printed resistors and capacitors tuned at the substrate level—will get pulled into power and RF modules to shorten signal paths and shrink BOMs. Expect tighter process control, in-line metrology, and closed-loop trimming to make substrate printed passives more predictable and designable.
GaN/SiC Push Packaging to Be the Performance Enabler
Wide-bandgap devices will set the pace. Designers will demand substrates that survive higher junction temperatures, faster edges, and higher dv/dt without partial discharge or field concentration. Look for field-shaping features in metallization, rounded corners, thicker dielectrics where needed, and graded interfaces to spread stress. Gate loops will shorten further; stray inductance will be fought at the substrate level with tighter layout rules and embedded sense paths. The packaging stack—attach, substrate, interconnect—will be engineered as a single thermal-electrical-mechanical system.
Heterogeneous Integration Lands in Power, and on Ceramic
Chiplets and heterogeneous integration aren’t just for processors. Power stages, drivers, current sensors, and even simple control logic will increasingly co-reside on ceramic platforms to eliminate wire length and reduce losses. Expect more die-down attachment, sintered silver and copper interconnects, and localized thick-film insulation layers that allow vertical stacking or crossover without extra laminations. The payoff is smaller loop areas, efficient interconnects, and better thermal gradients.
Design for Thermal Reality, Not Thermal Hope
We’ll see a shift from static “best-case” thermal models to mission-profile-driven design rules. Substrates will be specified to survive real duty cycles: start-stop inverters, rapid charge bursts, or LEO satellite eclipses. That means more attention to thermal impedance over time, not just steady-state conductivity, and more accelerated life testing focused on solder fatigue, copper-ceramic delamination, and metallization drift. Standards and customer specs will increasingly call out thermo-mechanical cycling numbers, partial-discharge inception voltages, and insulation resistance at temperature/humidity bias.
Sustainability and Supply Pragmatism Enter the Spec
Thermal performance won’t excuse poor sustainability. Over the next five years, customers will push for reduced silver use, more recyclable metallization and plating stacks, and longer-life designs that simply fail less. On the supply side, dual-sourcing of powders, pastes, and base ceramics will become a design input, not a purchasing afterthought. Expect approved-equivalent material sets and DFM (design for manufacturing) rules that keep designs portable across qualified lines and regions.
Metrology, Traceability, and Process Data Become Differentiators
As modules become smaller and hotter, process visibility is everything. Inline firing profiles, AOI on metallization and vias, 3D thickness mapping, micro-void analysis in sintered layers, and post-cycle shear/peel data will become normal deliverables. Engineers will expect lot-level digital traceability and correlations between process parameters and field performance—not as a premium service but as table stakes for critical power and RF applications.
Education: The Real Bottleneck
The biggest barrier won’t be materials or machines. It will be engineering familiarity. Many PCB designers were trained in FR-4 paradigms. Over the next five years, winning teams will invest in cross-training between power electronics, RF, materials science, and reliability engineering so the substrate becomes a performance multiplier. The best designs will emerge when layout, device selection, attach methods, and thermal paths are co-designed from day one.
In five years, thermal substrates and ceramic/thick-film platforms won’t be niche solutions. They will be the foundations of high-reliability, high-density and cost effective electronics. The leaders will treat the substrate as a system component, not a commodity panel; they’ll design for actual thermal life, integrate passives intelligently, and measure what matters. Do that, and you won’t just manage heat, you’ll convert it into competitive advantage.
Brian Buyea is president of Remtec.
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