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Core Requirements for 5G Antenna Substrate Materials and the Value of Hydrocarbon Resins


Release time:

2025-10-21

One of the core innovations in 5G communication technology is the introduction of Massive MIMO and beamforming technologies.

One of the core innovations in 5G communication technology is the introduction of Massive MIMO and beamforming technologies. This enables base stations (AAU) to focus wireless signal energy into narrow, precise beams that dynamically target user terminals like “spotlights,” significantly enhancing network capacity, coverage, and interference resistance. However, the accuracy and brightness of this “spotlight” largely depend on its hardware foundation—the performance of 5G antenna substrate materials.

The physical foundation of beamforming lies in precisely controlling the transmission phase of each antenna element within the array. Only when every element's phase is strictly aligned with algorithmic specifications can their signals combine spatially to form a narrow beam directed toward a specific orientation. If the PCB substrate material, serving as the signal transmission path, exhibits inconsistencies in its dielectric constant (Dk) or drift due to environmental changes, it will cause varying transmission delays across different paths. This leads to phase errors that can cause the beam to lose focus, deviate directionally, or even split, resulting in severe degradation of communication quality.

Therefore, for 5G antenna substrate materials, beyond the low loss (low Df) sought in all high-frequency materials, nearly stringent requirements are placed on the high consistency and stability of Dk values. These requirements manifest across three levels:
1.  Batch Consistency: The Dk values of substrate materials produced in each batch must be highly consistent to ensure uniform performance of antennas in mass production.
2. In-board Consistency: Within a single large substrate, the Dk value must be uniform from center to edge to ensure identical dielectric environments for each cell in large-scale antenna arrays.
3. Environmental Stability: Base station antennas endure year-round outdoor exposure to wind, sunlight, rain, snow, and extreme temperature/humidity fluctuations. The substrate material's Dk value must remain stable without drift under these dynamic conditions.

High-frequency, high-speed hydrocarbon resins have emerged as the ideal choice for 5G antenna substrates precisely due to their exceptional performance in these areas. Their core advantage lies in ultimate “purity” and “stability.” Through comprehensive SPC statistical process control and a rigorous quality traceability system, the entire process—from raw materials to synthesis and finished products—is tightly controlled, achieving exceptionally high batch-to-batch performance consistency. Its unique molecular structure and cross-linked network ensure uniformity in the cured material, meeting the requirement for in-board consistency.
More importantly, hydrocarbon resin's extremely low moisture absorption (<0.05%) and high weather resistance render it virtually “immune” to environmental humidity fluctuations, fundamentally eliminating Dk value variations caused by water absorption. Simultaneously, its flat Dk-temperature curve ensures phase stability across a wide temperature range.

It can be said that high-frequency, high-speed hydrocarbon resin provides an almost perfect, uniform, and stable “electromagnetic vacuum” environment for precise beamforming in 5G antennas. It enables engineers to accurately realize their design intentions, ensuring every precious signal beam is projected precisely to the target user. This truly transforms the promise of 5G's high speeds and massive connectivity into an exceptional user experience that is tangibly perceptible.

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