MG Chemicals 843WB Super Shield Water Based Silver Coated Copper Print
MG Chemicals 843WB Super Shield Water Based Silver Coated Copper Print
Introduction
The MG Chemicals 843WB Super Shield Water Based Silver Coated Copper Print is a revolutionary product that offers exceptional EMI/RFI shielding capabilities. With its one-part urethane system pigmented with highly conductive silver coated copper flake, this water-based conductive coating provides a smooth and durable finish that adheres well to various materials.
Main Features
- Easy to use, no let-down, and no heat cure necessary
- Can be applied by spray, brush, or roller
- Smooth, durable, and adheres well to plastics, wood, metal, and ceramics
- Bonds well to drywall and can be painted over with common Architectural paints
- Provides excellent EMI/RFI shielding over a broad range of frequencies
- Volume resistivity of 6.82 x 10(-4) ohm cm
- One-part, ready-to-use system – no dilution required
- Excellent adhesion to drywall and plastics
- Not regulated for air transport (non-hazmat)
- Attention! The product gels below 0°C [32°F]. If the product was exposed to freezing temperature, keep warm @ 22°C [72°F] for 2 days prior to use
Applications & Usages
The MG Chemicals 843WB Super Shield Water Based Silver Coated Copper Print is widely used in Architectural and electronic applications that require highly effective EMI/RFI shielding. It is the ideal choice for Architectural RFI shielding applications due to VOC regulations that prohibit the use of solvent-based systems.
Some common applications include:
- Containing RFI within a room, such as an engine room, to prevent interference across other rooms
- Protecting a room containing sensitive electronic equipment from general sources of interference, such as server rooms, recording studios, laboratories, and surgical rooms, especially those near cell phone or radio towers
- Providing EMI/RFI shielding to electronic enclosures, sensors, test equipment, portable controllers, communication devices, and most applications where one would normally use solvent-based shielding
- Repairing conductive traces and electronic prototyping