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When vias aren’t enough: coins, inlays, and embedded heat pipes.

TL;DR

  • There’s an escalation ladder for board-level cooling: vias → heavy copper → copper coin/inlay → embedded heat pipe / IMS. Climb it only as far as the power density forces you.
  • A copper coin (a solid slug pressed into the board under a hot part) cuts the junction-to-heatsink resistance dramatically — often the best $/°C once you pass ~5 W/cm².
  • Embedded heat pipes move heat *laterally* to a cooler edge or sink; they shine when the hotspot and the heatsink can’t be co-located. They’re expensive and fab-specific — model the benefit in TRM before committing.

The escalation ladder

Don’t jump to exotic solutions. Each rung is cheaper and simpler than the next; stop at the first that meets margin:

  1. Thermal vias + plane area — the default; good to ~2–3 W with disciplined copper. (rules)
  2. Heavy copper (2–4 oz) — more spreading and current capacity, modest cost adder.
  3. Copper coin / inlay — a solid copper slug through the board under the hot device; step change in vertical conduction.
  4. IMS / aluminum-core (MCPCB) — the whole board becomes a heat spreader; great for LED/power, limited routing.
  5. Embedded heat pipe / vapor chamber — for lateral transport when the sink is elsewhere; highest cost and complexity.

Copper coins & inlays

A coin replaces the via array under a hot pad with solid copper — eliminating the air gaps and plating limits of barrels. Two styles: a pressed-fit coin (a machined slug pressed into a milled cavity) and a plated copper-filled cavity. The win is the vertical θ: a coin can be 3–5× lower resistance than a dense via array of the same footprint, because it’s solid metal, not a hollow lattice. The cost is a fab process step and a heavier board.

Copper coin under a 30 W FET · θ vs. via array: −60% · Tj −22 °C (TRM)
Figure 1 — A coin turns a hollow via lattice into solid vertical copper. Model the delta in TRM first.

Embedded heat pipes

When the hot device and the available heatsink/chassis surface are far apart on the board, vertical conduction doesn’t help — you need lateral transport. An embedded heat pipe (or vapor chamber laminated into the stack) moves heat sideways at an effective conductivity many times that of copper. Use cases: a power stage that must dump to a board-edge bracket; a tightly-packed module with no room for a sink directly above the hotspot.

Caveats: heat pipes have an orientation dependence (wick vs gravity), a maximum transport capacity, and they make the board fab a specialty job. The benefit is real but situational — quantify it in TRM (as an anisotropic high-k region) against the simpler “just move the hot part nearer the sink” option, which is often cheaper.

Climb the cooling ladder one rung at a time. The expensive rungs are real tools, not defaults — earn them with a TRM number.

Checklist

  • ☐ Exhaust vias + plane + heavy copper before exotics
  • ☐ Consider a copper coin above ~5 W/cm² point power density
  • ☐ For coins: choose pressed-fit vs plated-fill with your fab early
  • ☐ Heat pipe only when hotspot and sink can’t be co-located
  • ☐ Model every option in TRM (coin = solid-copper region; pipe = anisotropic high-k) before committing
  • ☐ Confirm the construction with the fab — these are specialty processes

Need the analysis?

Extreme-power-density boards are our high-power practice, and every option gets a TRM number before you spend on tooling. Scope a project.

References

  1. IPC-2152 thermal characterization; IPC-7093 (bottom-termination thermal).
  2. Copper-coin / inlay fabrication app notes (Ventec, AT&S).
  3. Embedded heat pipe / vapor chamber integration literature (thermal-management journals).