Mission Darkness TitanRF™ Faraday Patch offers the next generation of faraday shielding. It has been
laboratory tested and certified to shielding effectiveness standards IEEE 299-2006 (see report
details below). The high-shielding conductive adhesive rectangular sheet with rounded edges comes in
multiple sizes. The flexible patch is primarily used to mend a punctured faraday bag, connect two
sheets of TitanRF Faraday Fabric, seal radio frequency (RF) shielding cages, create a rapid faraday
enclosure, EMI shielding, or as a pocket sticker to deflect cell phone radiation away from the body.
Use TitanRF™ Faraday Patch for Your RF Shielding Project or Enclosure
Mission Darkness TitanRF™ Faraday Patch offers the next generation of faraday shielding. It has been
laboratory tested and certified to shielding effectiveness standards IEEE 299-2006 (see report
details below). The high-shielding conductive adhesive rectangular sheet with rounded edges comes in
multiple sizes. The flexible patch is primarily used to mend a punctured faraday bag, connect two
sheets of TitanRF Faraday Fabric, seal radio frequency (RF) shielding cages, create a rapid faraday
enclosure, EMI shielding, or as a pocket sticker to deflect cell phone radiation away from the body.
If using as a patch, remove backing and firmly adhere to flat surface. Make sure the patch completely
and securely covers the punctured area. Large patch sheets can be used to create a faraday enclosure
by folding sides and sticking over an object. You can trim the patch with scissors to fit your
specific need.
If using with Titan RF Faraday Fabric, place the sheets together and overlap slightly. Adhere the
patch to the front and back layers to seal both sides. Make sure all edges are covered. The patch is
extremely strong and cannot be removed easily once in place (may damage the fabric if removed).
Simple Way to Repair a Punctured Faraday Bag
1) Peel Adhesive Backing
2) Place Over Punctured Area
3) Firmly Secure to Fabric
Scientifically Proven Performance, Lab Tested and Certified
Testing Completed by Keystone Compliance Laboratory on October 7, 2020
TitanRF™ Faraday Patch has been tested and certified to meet shielding effectiveness standards IEEE
299-2006. The shielding effectiveness test was conducted by Keystone Compliance, a full-service
regulatory compliance laboratory offering solutions for nearly all EMC/EMI, environmental,
ISTA-certified package and ingress protection testing requirements. IEEE 299-2006 is the standard
test method for measuring the effectiveness of electromagnetic shielding enclosures and materials. A
properly-shielded device will effectively retain all RF energy in its faraday enclosure and keep all
external RF isolated.
The TitanRF™ Faraday Patch is advertised as a material that can be used to isolate devices by
blocking the frequency range most mobile devices and electronics transmit/operate within. To provide
validation for this claim, the shielding effectiveness test measured how well the material shields
frequencies between 1.5GHz to 40GHz. The positive test results provides authentication of its
shielding abilities. The full test report and signal attenuation graph can be viewed on the link
below.
Small Patch (4 per Pack): 3.5" x 3.5" (8.89cm x 8.89cm) Medium Patch (2 per Pack): 5" x 6" (12.7cm x 15.24cm) Large Patch (2 per Pack): 10" x 12" (25.4cm x 30.48cm)
Features
Extremely high-shielding conductive adhesive patch (multiple sizes available)
High shielding material for blocking RF signals such as WiFi, cell signals (including 5G), GPS, and
Bluetooth
Includes an instruction sheet for Faraday enclosure construction tips
Laboratory tested and certified to shielding effectiveness standards IEEE 299-2006
Easy to work with: cut if needed, peel backing, and apply to surface
Flexible and durable; resistant to ripping or tearing without strong force
Can be used to repair or patch a punctured Faraday bag
Simple way to connect multiple sheets of TitanRF Faraday Fabric
Primary Applications
Shielding electronic devices from RF signals, deflection/protection against EMF and EMI radiation,
DIY RF shielding cages and enclosures, data security, and enhancing digital privacy