Thanks! Very interesting reading. I don't envy professionals that need to thoroughly understand that spec, but I do respect them. :-)
I'm a little surprised that 62368 doesn't seem to distinguish at all between internal/external layers, and between coated/uncoated traces. I can believe that at 240VAC you can't trust the solder mask to be rated to isolate that voltage from direct contact, but it seems like it should be relevant to trace separation, at least a little. And surely internal traces buried in the board should have milder requirements? I'm also remembering the drastic differences that internal/coated/uncoated are granted under 2221B (0.25mm, 0.8mm, and 2.5mm, respectively. That said, I suppose 2221B is obsolete for some good reasons.)
As you noted, maintaining 4mm everywhere on the board, whether internal/external/coated/uncoated or pins is going to be tough... e.g. the connector pin pad edges are 4.3mm apart, so a trace of any significant width is going to bring that under 4mm. I'm using an
HCPL3700M IC which feeds what for me peaks at 170V (rectified 120VAC) out to two pins that by 62368 are supposed to be 2mm apart (bare minimum 1.4mm at the most relaxed) but those pad edges are ~1.3mm apart (before a trace is even involved.) And that IC is rated for 240VAC as well... Seems like either I'm not understanding 62368 yet or they assume you will conformally coat if using ≥120VAC?
At any rate, my current plan, submitted for comment by anyone gracious enough to spare this newbie any more time:
- expose areas at the ends of the power traces
- solder appropriate-gauge coated wire to double those traces to act as additional current path (insulated and rated to appropriate voltage). (AKA bodge wires, but, you know, nice ones. :-) )
- remove power traces from the top layer (now that they are reinforced with the wires, and already doubled or tripled on the other layers, might as well not have the HV near the components on the top)
- conformally coat the bottom of the board on the high voltage side of the PCB
- add some high voltage transient suppression for the L1/L2/N feeding the stove (in the hopes of preventing high voltage spikes from even reaching the PCB, and allowing me to escape needing 6, 8mm clearances, etc.) (still researching details on this; e.g. not sure if
this kind of thing will suffice.)