Where Can I Find Ferrite-Impregnated Silicone or Epoxy for RF Noise Suppression?

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A PCB in a consumer product is emitting significant RF noise in the 350MHz band, and the company responsible for the board is unresponsive to design changes. The user has attempted various decoupling methods without success and is seeking a silicone or epoxy with ferrite. However, it is suggested that an electrically conductive material is more effective than ferrite for RF EMI shielding. The discussion also highlights the importance of grounding any EMI shielding applied to avoid short circuits. Ultimately, the user is looking for sources of ferrite silicone or ferrite powder while considering alternative shielding methods.
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I have a PCB inside of a consumer product that our company does not make. It is emitting a great deal of RF noise in the 350MHz band. I am looking to find a silicone or epoxy with ferrite impregnated in it.

Where can I get it?

I won't be able to get the company that makes the board to change the design in the near future, they are too big and too slow to respond. I have reverse engineered the board and constructed a schematic. I have exhaustively tried various decoupling methods to kill the noise but have not found a solution that is suitable.

Thanks
 
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You don't need ferrite, you need an electrically conductive material. Ferrite is great for magnetic shielding, but is terrible for RF EMI. Try something like this:

http://www.mgchemicals.com/products/841.html?PHPSESSID=d41c883dc3548ebc1362bc3c166c5db7

Be sure you ground all of the indvidual coated parts to the supply ground either with wires or spring-loaded grounding fingers.
 
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Ferrite is used for their RF lossy energy absorbing properties.

Check out - I didn't have to go very for for a good explanation
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=183148

If I put the EMI shielding on the board it will
1 - require that I connect it to ground
2 - short everything that I pour it on

I know, I know, I can put silicone on and then paint the silicone with the EMI shielding. I fact, I have a can of it right next to me, I'll try it out

But I still would like a source for ferrite silicone or ferrite powder
 
fizz_it said:
Ferrite is used for their RF lossy energy absorbing properties.

Check out - I didn't have to go very for for a good explanation
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=183148

If I put the EMI shielding on the board it will
1 - require that I connect it to ground
2 - short everything that I pour it on

I know, I know, I can put silicone on and then paint the silicone with the EMI shielding. I fact, I have a can of it right next to me, I'll try it out

But I still would like a source for ferrite silicone or ferrite powder

No, ferrite beads are meant to keep long cables from acting like antenna and radiating the RF noise. In a way, it's meant to plug the RF leaks (from the cables coming out of your shielded enclosure). The stuff Negitron linked to is meant to coat the inside of a plastic enclosure, thus leaving enough metal that there's RF suppression due to skin-depth effects. Or you could just use a metal enclosure.
 
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