Product Feature
Part Risk Manager surfaces supplier Full Material Declaration files per component, so you verify substance composition against RoHS, REACH, PFAS, and TSCA without chasing vendor forms.
Overview
A Full Material Declaration (FMD) lists every substance and homogeneous material inside a component, usually as IPC-1752A XML or Chemsherpa. Part Risk Manager collects these FMDs alongside each part's risk score, lifecycle status, and compliance flags, with direct links to the supplier source. Your engineers cross-check substance-level data in one view and feed it straight into compliance decisions.
A RoHS-compliant flag means little without the declaration showing which materials were measured and at what concentration. Part Risk Manager keeps the FMD on every component page, next to the risk scorecard, lifecycle forecast, and REACH and RoHS flags, so the source sits one click away. This matters because declarations expire and substances get added: the REACH SVHC list now exceeds 240 substances, so a part clean 18 months ago can fall out of compliance without any physical change, and attaching the FMD to live risk data shows the document and the current verdict together.
FMDs arrive in machine-readable formats built for system-to-system transfer. IPC-1752A class C and D declarations and Chemsherpa-CI files are XML structures carrying a component's full substance breakdown, not just a pass or fail, and Part Risk Manager offers these files for download so you import them into your PLM and retain a defensible record of what each part contains. That trail is what auditors and customers ask for: when your team prepares a Certificate of Compliance or a SCIP dossier, the evidence must trace back to supplier declarations, and pulling the FMD from the component record keeps that chain intact across thousands of parts.
No platform has a declaration for every part on day one, and that is where this feature earns its keep. Part Risk Manager flags line items where an FMD is missing or out of date, so your team knows which parts need supplier follow-up instead of assuming silence means compliance, while parts that do have declarations get retrieved automatically. For deeper substance screening or a campaign to close BOM coverage gaps, Part Risk Manager links into Compliance Manager, which carries a large FMD and CoC database plus supplier outreach: Part Risk Manager gives per-part visibility, and Compliance Manager handles full-program assessment.
A feature of
Full Material Declaration is one capability inside Z2 Part Risk Manager, the industry's largest component intelligence platform. Search and score 1B+ parts across obsolescence, compliance, sourcing, and supplier risk, all in one view.
Common Questions
An FMD lists every substance inside a component, usually as IPC-1752A or Chemsherpa XML. A Certificate of Compliance states that a part meets a regulation. The FMD is the raw evidence; the CoC is the conclusion. Part Risk Manager surfaces the FMD so you can verify the data behind any compliance claim.
Declarations are sourced from component suppliers and consolidated against Z2's parts database. Where a manufacturer publishes its FMD publicly, Part Risk Manager links to that source so you can confirm authenticity. Parts without a declaration are flagged so you can request one or escalate to Compliance Manager.
Yes. FMDs are downloadable as machine-readable files in standard formats such as IPC-1752A XML, which import into PLM tools. This keeps a defensible substance record per part and supports later reporting, including SCIP notifications and CoC generation.