|
Bare copper
conductor will oxidize from exposure to the atmosphere forming copper
oxide on the surface. Oxidation and other types of corrosion are accelerated
by the presence of heat, moisture, and some insulating materials such
as rubber. The oxide film is a poor conducting material and must be removed
to assure a good, reliable terminal connection. To prevent corrosion and
enhance terminating (soldering), bare copper is coated with a metal that
is not susceptible to oxidation and corrosion. Contact resistance between
conductors and terminals is reduced with coating materials like tin, silver
and nickel.
Tin is the
most frequently used coating; however, nickel and silver are used for
specific applications.
Tin The least expensive coating for ordinary usage is tin. It is a soldering
aid and is specified when that type of terminating method is used.
Tinned
Copper Normally a film thickness of 20 micro-inches (.000020") is
applied to each strand. The strands are twisted together to form the tinned
copper conductor.
Heavy
Tinned Copper Carries a heavier tin thickness on the individual
strand - 100 micro-inches on smaller than 30 AWG strands; 150 micro-inches
on 30 AWG and larger.
Prefused
Copper Consists of twisted strands of heavy tinned copper fused
with heat along the length.
Overcoated
Copper Consists of tinned strands of copper twisted together followed
by a tin coating over the twisted conductor. The finished product is bonded
along its entire length.
Topcoated
Copper Consists of bare copper strands twisted together, with the
resulting conductor given a coating of tin. The finished product is bonded
along its entire length.
Silver Silver is primarily electroplated to copper and then drawn down to the
proper conductor size with a resulting 40 micro-inch coating. Silver-coated
conductors are reliable for continuous temperature application through
200°C. Although higher in cost than tinned copper, silver coated
conductors have a lower resistance, than either tin or nickel coated conductors.
At higher frequencies, the current density is at the
conductor surface (skin effect) thereby making this highly conductive
coating material the most effective of all coatings.
Nickel Nickel plating is considered suitable for continuous service up to 260°C.
At these elevated temperatures, nickel does not tarnish as does silver.
|