Executive Summary: Specifying Plating for High-Cycle Mating
Connector contact plating thickness directly determines a terminal's mating cycle lifespan and electrical resistance. While tin plating is highly cost-effective for static, high-normal-force connections (<50 cycles), high-cycle mating environments require noble metals. 15μ" (micro-inches) of gold supports moderate cycling, whereas 30μ" gold is strictly required to prevent base-metal oxidation in mission-critical, high-vibration B2B applications.
Key Engineering Rule of Thumb: For industrial automation, medical robotics, and mil-spec interconnects exceeding 100 mating cycles or exposed to high-vibration, always specify a minimum of 30μ" of hard gold over a 50μ" nickel underplate. This guarantees compliance with EIA-364 durability standards, prevents fretting corrosion, and maintains ultra-low Contact Resistance over the lifetime of the assembly.
Engineering Deep Dive: The Metallurgy of Signal Integrity
The metal base of a terminal contact is usually brass, phosphor bronze, or beryllium copper. These copper alloys provide excellent spring properties and conductivity but oxidize rapidly when exposed to air. To preserve Signal Integrity and lower insertion forces, manufacturers plate these base metals. Choosing between Tin (Sn) and Gold (Au) involves balancing cost, mating cycles, and environmental vibration.
Tin Plating: The Static Standard
Tin is a soft, inexpensive metal used extensively in automotive and consumer appliance wiring.
- The Technical Edge: Because tin is soft, it requires a high "normal force" (the pressure the receptacle applies to the pin) to break through its own natural oxide layer when mated. Once mated securely, it provides an excellent, gas-tight electrical connection.
- The Engineering Constraint: Fretting Corrosion. Tin is highly susceptible to micro-vibrations (fretting). As the connector vibrates, the tin oxide layer is continually scraped off and reformed, eventually building up a thick, non-conductive barrier of black tin-oxide dust. Therefore, tin should never be specified for continuous-flex or high-vibration environments unless combined with specialized contact lubricants. Tin is also limited to low-cycle mating (typically <50 cycles) before the plating wears through.
Gold Plating (15μ" vs. 30μ"): The Noble Solution
Gold is a noble metal; it does not react with oxygen, meaning it forms no resistive oxide layer. This allows for very low normal mating forces, making it ideal for high-density, multi-pin connectors.
- 15μ" Gold (Moderate Mating): Often referred to as "commercial grade," 15 micro-inches (0.38 microns) of gold is ideal for standard data center connections or internal device headers that might be mated and unmated 50 to 100 times over their lifecycle.
- 30μ" Gold (High-Cycle / Industrial): This is the strict standard for telecom, medical, and heavy industrial applications. 30 micro-inches (0.76 microns) of hard gold provides the necessary mechanical wear resistance to survive 500+ mating cycles without exposing the underlying base metal.
- The Mandatory Nickel Underplate: Under IPC/WHMA-A-620 Class 3 and EIA-364 standards, gold must never be plated directly onto copper. A diffusion barrier of 50μ" Nickel (Ni) must be applied first. Without the nickel underplate, copper atoms will rapidly migrate through the porous gold layer to the surface, where they will oxidize and destroy the connection's electrical integrity.
Eliminate Intermittent Connection Failures
Contact Plating Thickness and Durability Data
|
Plating Material / Thickness |
Min. Nickel Underplate |
Est. Max Mating Cycles |
Normal Force Requirement |
Vulnerability |
Primary B2B Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Tin (Sn) - 100μ" to 200μ" |
Optional (Copper flash) |
< 50 Cycles |
High (>150 grams) |
Fretting Corrosion |
Automotive sensors, Power relays |
|
Gold Flash (1μ" to 3μ") |
50μ" |
< 25 Cycles |
Low |
Porosity, Wear |
Disposable medical, Cheap PCB headers |
|
Gold (Au) - 15μ" |
50μ" |
~ 100 Cycles |
Low (30 - 50 grams) |
Moderate Wear |
Standard Datacom, Consumer electronics |
|
Gold (Au) - 30μ" |
50μ" |
500+ Cycles |
Low |
High Cost |
Industrial Automation, Telecom |
|
Gold (Au) - 50μ" |
50μ" |
1000+ Cycles |
Low |
Highest Cost |
Mil-Spec, Aerospace (MIL-DTL-38999) |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I mate a gold-plated pin with a tin-plated receptacle?
No. Mating gold and tin contacts is a severe engineering violation known as "dissimilar metal mating." The vast difference in their noble potential causes rapid galvanic corrosion in the presence of any humidity. Furthermore, the harder gold contact will aggressively scrape the softer tin, transferring tin oxides onto the gold surface and destroying the low-level contact resistance. Always mate gold-to-gold and tin-to-tin.
What is "hard gold" vs. "soft gold" in connector plating?
"Soft gold" is pure, 24-karat gold (99.9% purity), typically used for wire bonding directly on semiconductor dies. "Hard gold," which is universally used for connector plating, is alloyed with tiny amounts of cobalt or nickel (usually 0.1% to 0.5%). This dramatically increases the material's hardness and wear resistance, allowing it to survive high-cycle wiping action without galling or wearing through.
How do you verify gold plating thickness on a custom wire harness?
Visual inspection cannot determine if a terminal has 3μ" of gold flash or 30μ" of hard gold. Our manufacturing facilities utilize automated X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) testing to non-destructively measure the exact micron-level thickness of both the gold top-layer and the nickel underplate, providing verifiable, lot-traceable data for automotive and medical OEM compliance.