ADI 高速、混合、微弱信号布线指南 (英文原版)
ADI 高速、混合、微弱信号布线指南 (英文原版)
ADI 高速、混合、微弱信号布线指南 (英文原版)
PC Board Layout
Techniques for FAEs
High Speed, Mixed-Signal & Low Level
Applications
The Art of PCB Design
ADI Confidential 2
Agenda
PCBs 101
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
z The Power of Power and Ground planes
z Proper use of decoupling capacitors
z The True Nature of Resistors and Capacitors in High-speed Designs
z High-speed Signal Propagation - Wires or Transmission Lines?
z Impedance Mismatches, Series and Parallel Termination
z Managing EMI
Mixed Signal PCB Layout
z Grounding Mixed Signal Data Acquisition System
z Ground Plane in Mixed Signal Designs
z Power Filtering & decoupling
z Parasitic Consideration
z Control Differential line impedance
Small Signal Layout
z Consider Track Resistor Loss
z Proper grounding shielding cable
z Minimize PCB Leakage by Guard Ring
z Prevent PCB Heating Temperature Sensors
ADI Confidential 3
PCB Basics
PCB Units of Measurement
PCB methodologies originated in the United States
Units of measurement are therefore typically in
Imperial units, not SI/metric units.
z Board dimensions are commonly measured in inches.
z Dielectric thickness & conductor length and width typically
measured in inches and “mils”.
1 mil = 0.001 inches
1 mil = .0254 mm
Typical thickness
z 0.5oz = 17.5µm
z 1.0oz = 35.0µm
z 2.0oz = 70.0µm
z 3.0oz = 105.0µm
ADI Confidential 4
PCB Basics Copper Foil
PCB Stack-up
Prepreg
Core
Prepreg
Core
Cross Section of a typical 8-
layer stack-up
Prepreg
Core
Prepreg
ρ⋅L ρ ⋅L L
R= = = Rs
A h ⋅W W
Cu resistivity: ρ=1.7E10-8Ωm
Source: http://circuitcalculator.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/pcb-trace-geometry-1.png
ADI Confidential 6
PCB Basics
PCB Conductors : Power Planes
Copper Foil
Signal trace
Prepreg
Power plane
Core
Prepreg
Core
Prepreg
Core
Prepreg
Power Planes
z A solid layer of copper used to provide power or ground.
z Typically use thicker copper layer than signal layers to reduce resistance.
Why are they needed?
z Provide a stable, low-impedance path for power and ground signals to all
devices on the PCB
z Shield signals between layers to minimize cross-talk
Signal Integrity Tip: By placing power and ground on opposite sides
of thin core material, we can maximize the “intra-plane
capacitance”. Also, this minimizes PCB warping.
ADI Confidential 7
PCB Basics
PCB Insulators / Dielectrics
Common Dielectric Materials
z FR-4 (Woven fiberglass and epoxy)
Most commonly used, widely available, relatively low-cost
Susceptible to cracking
z Polyimide
Good performance at high frequencies
z FR & CEM
FR : Flame Retardant
ADI Confidential 8
PCB Basics
Vias
ADI Confidential 9
PCB Basics
Typical PCB Design Process
Fabrication
Tolerance
(i.e. min trace width,
min hole size, etc.)
Schematic
DRC Report PCB
Schematic
Capture DRC Report
PCB
Fabrication
Netlist Gerber Files
Layout
PCB
Schematic
Drill File
Library
Footprint
Library
PCB
Librarian and/or Parameters
(i.e. core material,
device provider copper weight, etc)
ADI Confidential 12
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Using the Right Equipment
A good oscilloscope with ample
bandwidth is an essential tool in high-
speed PCB projects.
z Need to consider the bandwidth and
sampling frequency of the device.
What will a 133MHz SDRAM signal look
like on a low-cost scope with 200MHz
bandwidth and 2GSPS sampling rate?
z Important events like glitching,
overshoot and undershoot, and power
supply noise may not be properly
represented on a low-cost scope. How are these related?
ADI Confidential 13
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Power and Ground Planes
Power and ground planes should always
be used when possible. Why?
z Provides a low-impedance path between
the power supply and the devices in the
system.
z Provide shielding
z Provide heat dissipation
z Reduces stray inductance Pulse response with and without
a ground plane
A solid, unbroken plane is best. (source Analog Dialogue:
z Breaks in the ground plane can introduce Volume 39, September 2005)
ADI Confidential 14
Generally Good PCB Design Practices
Decoupling Capacitors (or “bypass”VDDint
caps)
When gates within a device
switch, there is an
instantaneous change in
impedance within the device. PMOS
z Result is an instantaneous
change in current.
Decoupling capacitors provide
NMOS
CGATE
a low-impedance current
source for these instantaneous
changes.
z Reduces voltage fluctuation on VDD
the ground and power signals.
z Helps ensure power and voltage
signals are within the operating GND
Low to high
High to low
specification of the device. transition
VDD transition
GND
ADI Confidential 15
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Decoupling Capacitors
Five
broad frequency
bands need to be
“bypassed” with high-
speed devices
z DC to 10kHz SUPPLY, V
VDDEXT
z 10kHz to 100kHz +3.300V
+3.218V(-2.5%)
165mVpp
electrolytic bypass
capacitors
z 100kHz to 10MHz +1.260V(+5%)
+1.230V(+2.5%)
Taken care of by multiple VDDINT +1.200V 60mVpp
10nF (0.01uF)
DEM AND CAUSED BY INCREAS ED PROGRAM ACTIVITY
ADI Confidential 16
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Decoupling Capacitors
How many decoupling capacitors are required?
z System dependent!
Need to consider frequency of operation, number of I/O pins switching,
Capacitive load on each pin, trace impedance, junction temperature, internal
chip operation, etc.
For processors, consider the variety of internal operations like cache, internal
memory accesses, DMA, etc. etc. etc.
z The rule of thumb: At all frequencies from DC, to well above the highest
clock frequencies, the supply pins should have less than ±5% of VDD total
noise.
z The tolerance of the maximum DC supply voltage drift PLUS the peak
noise amplitude must be less than 5% of the nominal supply voltage.
An oscilloscope with ample bandwidth is required.
Variousmethods exist for estimating the total required capacitance
and how to distribute the capacitance across a number of smaller
value capacitors
This is a complex problem, particularly when dealing with the complexities of
modern processors which contain millions of gates.
Numerous application notes on semiconductor websites
z www.freescale.com/files/32bit/doc/app_note/AN2586.pdf
ADI Confidential 17
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Decoupling Capacitors
Forbest performance,
minimize the inductance
and resistance between the ABSOLUT ELY NOT ! BETT ER
THE BEST!
SOLID VIA W IT HIN PAD
ADI Confidential 18
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Decoupling Capacitors
When ground/power plane pairs are used, capacitors can be
just as effective on the top side of the PCB.
‘B’
VIAS DIAM, d = 0.47mm (12-mil)
NOTE: DRAWING IS NOT TO SCALE
ADI Confidential 19
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Decoupling Capacitors
Effective bypassing at frequencies over 100MHz…
z As clock frequencies and edge rates increase it becomes more
difficult to effectively bypass the power supply pins of high-
frequency devices.
Capacitor ESL (Effective Series Inductance) results in increasing
reactance with frequency
Capacitor ESR (Effective Series Resistance) increases, reducing the
effectiveness of capacitors
Capacitor parasitic mounting (pads, vias) reactance increases with
frequency
100nF capacitors are useless above 100MHz
ADI Confidential 20
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Understanding Capacitors - ESL
ESL (Effective Series Inductance) is caused by the inductance
of the electrodes and leads of the capacitor.
The ESL of a capacitor sets the limiting factor of how well (or
fast) a capacitor can de-couple noise off a power buss.
ADI Confidential 21
Good High-Speed PCB Design Practices
Understanding Capacitors - ESL
Source: www.murata.com/emc/knowhow/pdfs/te04ea-1/12to16e.pdf
ADI Confidential 22
Good PCB Design Practices
Understanding Capacitors
Different types of capacitors…
z TBA
ADI Confidential 23
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Understanding Resistors
ADI Confidential 24
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Wire or Transmission Line?
Wire or Transmission Line?
z Wire – we consider every
point of a wire to be at the
same potential at any given
point in time
z Transmission Line – we
consider the effects of signal
propagation and assume
that points along the
transmission line will be at
different voltage potentials
as signals traverse.
When to treat a signal path
as a transmission line?
z If the length is greater than
1/100 of the wavelength.
z If the receiving device is
edge sensitive.
z If the system is not tolerant
of excessive overshoot and
undershoot.
z Almost always!
Source: Johnson & Graham, High-Speed Digital Design (A
Handbook of Black Magic)
ADI Confidential 25
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Propagation : Time and Distance
Propagation Delay : the rate at which an electrical signal
travels through a medium.
z Typically measured in picoseconds/inch.
Electrical
signals propagate at a speed dependent on the
surrounding medium.
z Propagation delay increases proportionally to the square root of
the dielectric constant
ER
A
B
ADI Confidential 27
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Understanding Trace Impedance
Thephysical characteristics of
the PCB trace will have a large
effect on the impedance.
z Trace material
z Width of trace
z Trace thickness
z Proximity to other traces and
planes
z Dielectric constants of surrounding
materials (i.e. air, FR4, etc).
Many free tools available to help
estimate the impedance of a
trace.
http://emclab.umr.edu/pcbtlc2/inde
x.html
ADI Confidential 28
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Changes in Impedance Across Signal Path
trace trace trace cable trace
Device A Device B
via via connector connector
Edgar is a jogger
He travels at a rate of 6
inches / nanosecond
on a Printed Circuit
Board
ADI Confidential 30
Edgar Meets The “Unterminated”
Transmission line
Attributes:
z Point to point connection
z 25 Ohm impedance Output Driver
z 50 ohm impedance Transmission Line (Z0)
z 1 Meg Ohm impedance receiver
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 31
At The Start
ADI Confidential 32
Edgar Starts for the Receiver
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 33
Edgar Is REFLECTED!
ADI Confidential 34
Edgar Returns to the Driver
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 35
Edgar Finds the Next Obstacle
Edgar meets the 25Ω source driver after his return journey on
the 50 ohm transmission line.
The Reflected Energy is:
ZL − Z 0 25 − 50 1
= =−
ZL + Z 0 25 + 50 3
ADI Confidential 36
Edgar Is Sent to the Receiver Again
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 37
Edgar Is Sent to the Driver Again
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 38
Edgar Is Sent to the Receiver a Third Time
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 39
What would we see on the scope?
GND
ADI Confidential 40
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Transmission Line Termination
Leverage Ohms’ law to minimize the impedance mismatch at
the source side and load of the transmission line.
Managing the Source :
z Source impedance is typically less than 50Ω
z We can add a series resistor to the source to increase its
impedance to match the transmission line.
z This technique is called “serial termination”
ADI Confidential 41
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Parallel Termination
Parallel resistor at the receiver can work well but has:
z Increases drive current and thus increases power dissipation.
z Increased Crosstalk, Increased EMI.
z Increased ground bounce or supply noise (depending on if the
parallel resistor is pulled high or low).
Drive current
Driver Receiver
about 50 mA
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 42
High Speed PCB Design and Layout
Series Termination
Series resistor at the driver is less disruptive:
z …but the driver impedance is nonlinear and you lose some
energy getting into the transmission line
Driver Receiver
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 43
DDR SDRAM Termination
Driver Receiver
VCC/2
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 44
Edgar Meets DDR in the Real World
Driver Receiver
VCC/2
25 50
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 45
Edgar Finds the First Obstacle
ZL − Z 0 50 − 60 −1
= =
ZL + Z 0 50 + 60 11
ADI Confidential 46
Edgar is Reflected
Driver Receiver
VCC/2
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 47
Edgar Finds the Next Obstacle
ZL − Z 0 50 − 60 −1
= =
ZL + Z 0 50 + 60 11
ADI Confidential 48
Edgar is Reflected
Driver Receiver
VCC/2
Transmission Line
ADI Confidential 49
Good PCB Design Practices
Electro-Magnetic Emissions
Two primary tenants of electro-magnetism
z Current passing through a conductor generates a magnetic
field.
z Placing a conductor in a magnetic field will induce current
The shape an intensity of a magnetic field generated by
passing current through a conductor is affected by the
shape of the conductor and visa versa.
ADI Confidential 50
Good PCB Design Practices
EMI : Electro-Magnetic Interference
EMI typically refers to an undesirable amount of
electromagnetic emission from a design.
EMI from one device on a PCB may affect the performance
of another device.
z Digital circuits are more likely to be the source of disruptive
emissions due to the handling of periodic waveforms and the
fast clock/switching rates.
z Analog circuits are more likely to be the susceptible victims due
to higher gain functions.
EMI from the entire system may affect the performance of
other near-by systems.
ADI Confidential 51
Good PCB Design Practices
Reducing EMI in PCBs
There are many widely used techniques for minimizing the
EMI of a PCB design.
Fundamentals:
z Power and ground planes providing shielding
Top and bottom ground planes can help reduce radiation from multi-layer
boards by at least 10 dB.
Physical placement of devices on the PCB – keep analog and
z
digital systems as far apart as possible on the PCB
z Proper use of decoupling caps reduces power/ground noise
and thus EMI from these planes.
z Keep signal traces away from the edge of the PCB
z Avoid right angles in PCB traces
z Be cognizant of PCB trace resonance at fundamental
frequency or harmonics due to reflections.
z More to come…
http://www.radioing.com/eengineer/pcb-tips.html
ADI Confidential 52
Getting the best performance on our PCBs
As amplifiers and converters’ performance improved,
achieve their performance on your PCB will be
challenging.
ADI Confidential 53
The World Leader in High Performance Signal Processing Solutions
Grounding Data
Acquisition
System
ADI
Digital Currents Flowing in Analog
Return Path Create Error Voltages
Resistor
Analog
Circuitry
Resistor
Clock Analog Digital
Circuitry Circuitry Circuitry
Digital
Circuitry
Clock
Sensitive Analog Sensitive Analog Circuitry
Circuitry Disrupted by Circuitry safe from
Digital Supply Noise Digital Supply Noise
ID ID
IA IA
+ + + +
GND
GND IA
IA + ID ID REF
REF
ID
Incorrect ADI Confidential Correct 55
Grounding Mixed Signal ICs with Low
Internal Digital Currents: Multiple PC Boards
VN = NOISE BETWEEN
VN
GROUND PLANES
VA VD
FILTER
VA VD BUS
MIXED R
ANALOG SIGNAL BUFFER DIGITAL
CIRCUITS DEVICE LATCH CIRCUITS
AGND DGND
A A A D D
ANALOG DIGITAL
GROUND PLANE GROUND PLANE
A A D D
TO SYSTEM TO SYSTEM
ANALOG SUPPLY DIGITAL SUPPLY
ADI
TO Confidential
SYSTEM STAR GROUND 56
Star Ground System which has Separated Analog
and Digital Ground Planes
VA VN VA VN
VD VD
PCB PCB
ANALOG DIGITAL ANALOG DIGITAL
GROUND GROUND GROUND GROUND
PLANE PLANE PLANE PLANE
X X X X
A D A D
No No
DIGITAL GROUND PLANE
connection
}
connection
X BACK X
PLANE Not Over Lay
X X
ANALOG GROUND PLANE VA
ADI
Characteristics of Ground Planes
Digital Radios frequently have high speed digital logic on the same board as
high gain RF electronics.
Shielding and Grounding are significant aspects of the receiver design.
z Radiation should be shielded at the source
z Ground currents should be returned to their source
z Supply currents should take the path of least resistance & inductance back to the
source
Minimum 1 whole ground layer
z One entire PCB side (or layer) is a continuous ground conductor
Gives minimum ground resistance and inductance, but itn’t always sufficient to
solve all ground problems.
Breaks in ground planes can improve or degrade circuit performance – there is no
general ruls
z Eliminate the possibility ground loops
z Careful attention should be paid to layout to ensure that digital return currents do
not flow through analog section of the board.
Ground plane
acts as a shield
Using Mulit-layer (>=4) with ground and voltage plane
ADI Confidential 59
How to make full use of your Ground Plane?
Provide as much ground plane as possible
z Especially under traces that operate at high frequency
Use thickest metal as feasible
z Reduces resistance and provides improved thermal path
z Helps reduce resistive losses due to skin effect
Mount components that conduct fast rise times or high frequencies as close to the board
as possible
z Minimize use of leaded components
Try to single-point the critical components into the ground plane to avoid voltage drops.
Provide as much ground plane as possible
z Especially under traces that operate at high frequency
Mount components that conduct fast rise times or high frequencies as close to the board
as possible
z Minimize use of leaded components
Try to single-point the critical components into the ground plane to avoid voltage drops.
z Confine Analog circuitry to one section and digital circuitry to another.
z Avoid running digital and analog tracks close to each other, this will help avoid
coupling digital noise into analog lines.
ADI Confidential 60
Grounding example of solid ground plane
I e
rac
Single GND Layer for High Speed To
p T
ic
e ctr
Converters PCB board. Die
l
lan
e
P
z Cover empty space of TOP / Bottom nd
r ou
G
layer with GND, but no small
unconnected island. I
Resistor
as many as possible but do not cut
some plane to pieces.
Resistor
Digital
ADC
Resistor
z Some cut lines allowed to separate difference
area, but connection must be bigger than
Component (>10mm width). And no signal DC current
trace cross cut lines. follows the
z If all frequency range are consider (IE, path of least
sampling signal from DC to 50MHz), then
resistance
ground layer is difficult, need case by case
study. Top Side
Example
z In a broken ground or split ground, the
return currents follow the path of least
impedance.
z At DC, the current follows the path of least
resistance. As the frequency increases, the
current follows the path of least inductance.
z Since there is now a ‘loop’ the inductance
can be quite high and an EMI/RFI problem Bottom side
can exist.
ADI Confidential 63
Cut lines with good Component placement
Vin1 Vout1
Amp ADC SDRAM DAC Amp
GND GND
Cut DGND Area Cut
Line Line
Big Big
Capacitors Connector 1 Connector 2 Capacitors
Separate Analog area, mixer signal area and pure digital area.
No cross over of input and out put.
Clock area is an independent area.
Power supply is an independent area, especially DC-DC area.
z DC-DC must be a corner, better in an other PCB board.
z Cut lines must be used for DC-DC.
z Big Capacitors must be in a corner or near PCB boundary.
ADI Confidential 64
The World Leader in High Performance Signal Processing Solutions
Power Filter
&
Decoupling
Capacitor
consideration
Regulation priorities for power supply systems
CARD
CONNECTOR
#1 TO
INDIVIDUAL
+VS RAIL #2 STAGE +V
INPUT #3 S
+ L1 * + RAIL
C1
100μF/
100μH MULTIPLE 25V
3-5V NOISY 3-5V CLEAN PIN
INPUT FROM OUTPUT TO CONTACTS GROUND PLANE
C1 + C2
SWITCHING 300mA LOAD
100μF/20V 1μF
SUPPLY OR ANALOG COMMON
TANTALUM CERAMIC (GND)
DC-DC STAGE
CONVERTER INPUT
* Fastron
MESC C2
series or 100μF/
equivalent R1 25V
1Ω TO
-VS RAIL #1
INPUT INDIVIDUAL
#2 STAGE -V
#3 S
RAIL
- -
A Card-entry Filter is useful for low medium frequency power
line noise filtering in analog system C (100µF) ESL
Dual-Supply low frequency rail bypass / distribution filter REGION (20nH)
REGION
for Power distribution. LOG
High performance analog power systems use linear |Z|
ESR (0.2Ω)
regulators, with primary power derived from: REGION
z AC line power
z Battery power systems
z DC- DC power conversion systems ESR = 0.2Ω
Remember Electrolytic Capacitor Impedance vary with 10kHz 1MHz
Frequency
LOG FREQUENCY
ADI Confidential 66
DC-DC power filter
Added the C-L-C filter to remove to switching noise generated from DC-DC.
Those components have to enclose the DC-DC Vin pin as possible.
C1, C2 need consider switch frequency (50k, 100k, 1.2M)
ADI Confidential 67
Grounding and Decoupling Points
VA VA FERRITE
BEAD VD
SEE
TEXT
A A VA VD D
R
ADC BUFFER
AMP GATE
OR
DAC OR
TO OTHER
R REGISTER
DIGITAL
CIRCUITS
A VA AGND DGND
A A A D
VOLTAGE SAMPLING
ANALOG
REFERENCE CLOCK VA A GROUND PLANE
GENERATOR
DIGITAL
A A A D GROUND PLANE
ADI Confidential 68
Decoupling on SOIC parts
CORRECT INCORRECT
OPTIONAL
FERRITE BEADS
V+ V+
PCB
IC IC
TRACE
GND GND
VIAS TO
GROUND
PLANE VIA TO
GROUND
PLANE
RULE OF THUMB: VIA RESISTANCE ≈ 1mΩ, VIA INDUCTANCE ≈ 1nH
VCC C Correct
GND
VCC
LQFP Via
LFCSP VCC
C Wrong
GND
VCC
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
C Wrong
1000pF
2.2uF
0.01uF 0.1uF
0.1uF 100pf
0.01uF
1000pF
2.2uF 100pf
LP LP
RP CSTRAY RP
DATA
R BUFFER BUS
ANALOG DIGITAL
GATE OR
AIN/ CIRCUITS CIRCUITS DATA
REGISTER
OUT
A B
CIN ≈ 10pF
RP CSTRAY RP
IA ID
LP LP
AGND DGND
SHORT
A
CONNECTIONS
A VNOISE D
A = ANALOG GROUNDADI Confidential
PLANE D = DIGITAL GROUND PLANE 72
Low Speed High Resolution ADC layout Skills Example
AD7656 possible issue in Grounding and Decoupling
AD7656 Missing code (No
codes between 0 ~ -32) VA VD
ADI Confidential 73
Summary of Power Supply Bypassing &
decoupling
Place
bypass caps as close to the power supply pins as
possible
Parasitic
Consideration
ADI
Approximate Trace Inductance
W H
All dimensions are in mm
2L W+H
STRIP INDUCTANCE = 0.0002L ln ( W+H ) + 0.2235 ( L ) + 0.5 μH
ADI Confidential 76
Trace/Pad Capacitance
kA
C=
0.00885 Er A
pF C=
d d 11.3d
A
2
A = plate area in mm
d = plate separation in mm
ADI Confidential 77
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COUPLING
CAPACITIVE COUPLING
EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT MODEL
C
M = MUTUAL INDUCTANCE
B = MAGNETIC FLUX DENSITY IN
A = AREA OF SIGNAL LOOP
ωN = 2πfN = FREQUENCY OF NOISE SOURCE VN Z1 VCOUPLED
Z1 = CIRCUIT IMPEDANCE
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF INDUCTIVE COUPLING
Z2 = 1/jωC
)
⎛ Z1
VCOUPLED = VN ⎜
ADI Confidential ⎝ Z1 + Z2 78
CAPACITOR EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT
AND RESPONSE TO INPUT CURRENT PULSE
IPEAK = 1A
i
INPUT
v di 1A
CURRENT =
dt 100ns
ESR = 0.2Ω
0 Equivalent f = 3.5MHz
ESL = 20nH di
VPEAK = ESL •
dt
+ ESR • IPEAK = 400 m V
C = 100µF OUTPUT
XC = 0.0005Ω VOLTAGE
ESR • IPEAK = 200mV
@ 3.5MHz
ADI Confidential 79
Via Parasitics
ADI Confidential 80
Parasitic Model
Capacitor Parasitic Model Resistor Parasitic Model
RP RS L
CP L
RDA CDA
C = Capacitor
RP = insulation resistance
RS = equivalent series resistance (ESR)
L = series inductance of the leads and plates R = Resistor
R
RDA = dielectric absorption CP = Parallel capacitance
CDA = dielectric absorption L= equivalent series inductance (ESL)
ADI Confidential 81
Stray Capacitance & Stray Inductance
at inverting input RF
PAD PAD
+V
PAD
Stray Capacitance
TRACE
RG VIA
PAD
PAD
RF
TRACE
VO
+V
PAD PAD PAD
VI TRACE
RG PAD
VIA PAD
PAD
RL
Vi Stray Inductance PAD
RL
-V
-V
Low Frequency Op Amp Schematic High Frequency Op Amp Model
ADI Confidential 82
Stray Capacitance Simulation
7
3 U11 V11
+
V+
5
6
OUT
2
-
V-
AD8055an/AD 0
4 6.5% overshoot
R31 R21
V21
-5
V
1k 1k
0
V34 C8 0
1V
1pf
R11
150
Pulse Response with 1pF Stray Capacitance
0
0
0
1pF stray capacitance
7
L7 3 U11 V11
V+
+ 5
6
29nH OUT
2
-
V-
AD8055an/AD 0
4
R31 R21
V21
-5
1k 1k
V31 0
ADI Confidential 84
Layouts – What to do and not do!
RF X Disable NC
RF
Input Grounds
Disable NC
+Vs C -In RI
C +Vs -In RI
Vout +IN
Vout +IN
C
RL
NC -Vs
NC -Vs
C
RL
ADI Confidential 85
Power Supply Bypassing
Electrolytic
Electrolytic Ceramic
Bypass
Bypass
Ceramic
ADXXXX ADXXXX
Ceramic
Ceramic
Bypass
Bypass
Electrolytic
Electrolytic
Incorrect Correct
ADI Confidential 86
SOIC Layout Example
RF
Disable
RG
VIN Vout
Electrolytic
Bypass
RC C1
Electrolytic Ceramic
Bypass Bypass Comp
Cap
-VS
ADI Confidential 87
AD8099 Layout Example
Electrolytic +VS
Ceramic
Bypass VO
0402 Bypass
Disable
components
RG RF RL
RC C1
VIN
Ceramic CC
Bypass
Electrolytic
Bypass
ADI Confidential -VS 88
The World Leader in High Performance Signal Processing Solutions
Control Differential
Line Impedance
ADI
Typical LVDS Driver in CMOS
OUTPUT DRIVER V+ V–
+3.3V)
(3.5mA)
V– V+
+1.2V
3.5kΩ 3.5kΩ
w w
d
t εr = 3.8~4.0 @1.65Gbps
h
εr
Zodiff(Ω)= [ 60
ε
0.475 r + 0.67
* ln[ 4h
0.67( 0.8 w+ d ) ]* 2
ADI Confidential 91
Control Differential Line Impendence
8mil 8mil
Recommend software
z Polar Si6000
ADI Confidential 92
Measuring the TMDS pair impedance
TDR (Time Domain Reflector)
incident
D.U.T
50 Ohm
TDR Reflections
Step
Generator
Waveform
Digitizer
High Speed
S/H
ADI Confidential 93
The Visual lumped interconnect analysis
using TDR
ADI Confidential 94
Summary Mixed Signal Layout Techniques
Parasitics
z Parasiticcapacitance, inductance and resistance can ruin the best
designed circuit
z Layout is critical!
ADI Confidential 95
The World Leader in High Performance Signal Processing Solutions
Consider loss on
Track Resistor
Calculation of Sheet resistance
(For Standard Copper PCB)
ρZ
R=
XY
ρ = RESISTIVITY
Y
X
R = 0.48 Z m Ω
X
Z
= NUMBER OF SQUARES
X
R = SHEET RESISTANCE OF 1 SQUARE (Z=X)
= 0.48m Ω/SQUARE
ADI Confidential 97
Long Track Resistance Impact on ADC
5cm
OHM’s Law predicts >1 LSB of error due to drop in PCB conductor.
z Consider a 16-bit ADC with a 5kΩ input resistance,
z PCB track is 5cm of 0.25mm wide 1 oz.
z The track resistance of nearly 0.1Ω.
z The resulting voltage drop is a gain error of 0.1/5k (~0.0019%),
z Over 1LSB (0.0015% for 16 bits).
ADI Confidential 98
Small Common Ground Currents can degrade
Precision Amplifier
+5V
Accuracy
U1
AD8551
R1
VIN 99kΩ
5mV FS
VOUT
ISUPPLY R2
700μA 1kΩ RGROUND
0.01Ω
G1 ΔV ≅ 7μV G2
A low-level signal VIN of 5mV FS, Design required to precisely gain of 100.
z Using an AD8551 chopper-stabilized amplifier for best dc accuracy.
z Recall AD8551 Spec:
Low offset voltage: 1 μV, offset drift: 0.005 μV/°C
At the load end, the signal VOUT is measured with respect to G2, the local ground.
z Because of the small 700μA ISUPPLY of the AD8551 flowing between G1 and G2, there is a
7μV ground error on 0.01Ohm Ground impedance.
z About 7 times the typical input offset expected from the op amp!
ADI Confidential 99
A More Realistic Model of a Ground System
+Vs
HIGH SIGNAL
CURRENT SIGNAL ADC
CIRCUIT SOURCE
Z
i G1 I G2
ΔV
With changes,
this becomes
"star" ground
Any current flow through a common ground impedance can cause errors
ΔV = (I + i) * Z
z Z: The impedance between G1 and G2
z I : Signal related currents.
z i : The effect of any non-signal related currents.
Proper Grounding
Shielding Cable
Ground loops in shield twisted pair cable
BRIDGE
AND
A1 A2 RTD
IN CONDITIONING
CIRCUITS
NC
VN
GND 1 GND 2 BRIDGE
AND
RTD CONDITIONING
CIRCUITS
COAX CABLE
RS/2
A1 A2 A1 A2
RS/2
DIFF
AMP
RS/2
A1 A2 A1 A2
RS/2
SINGLE-
ENDED
AMP
Impedance-balanced driver of
balanced drive of balanced shielded Coaxial cables can use either
balanced or single-ender receivers
cable aids noise-immunity with either
balanced or single end source signals
ADI Confidential 103
Transmitter low level IF/RF signal with Micro-Strip
line
DIELECTRIC
TRACE H
W W
GROUND,
T POWER T B
PLANES
DIELECTRIC H H
EMBEDDED
TRACE
GROUND PLANE
Minimize PCB
Leakage by Guard
Ring
Using Guard-Rings Minimizes PCB Leakage Paths
Board leakage resistance 0.33pF
AD8067
-V
+IN -IN
Inverting
INVERTING MODE GUARD ENCLOSES ALL OP NON-INVERTING MODE GUARD ENCLOSES ALL OP AMP
AMP INVERTING INPUT CONNECTIONS WITHIN NON-INVERTING INPUT CONNECTIONS WITHIN A LOW
A GROUNDED GUARD RING IMPEDANCE, DRIVEN GUARD RING
GUARD 1 8 1 8
INPUT 2 7 GUARD 2 7
GUARD 3 6 INPUT 3 6
4 5 GUARD 4 5
–V S
–V S
W/m·K
Copper
406
385
then energy will be transferred down the PCB Gold 320
towards the colder end. The higher speed Aluminium 205
particles will collide with the slower ones with a Brass 109
Platinum 70
net transfer of energy to the slower ones. The Steel 50.2
rate of conduction heat transfer is: Lead 34.7
A T Mercury 8.3
Quartz 8
H
H = (K x A (THOT – TCOLD) / L Ice
Glass
1.6
0.8
Water 0.6
Wool 0.05
K = Thermal conductivity of the copper (385 W/(m·K)
Fiberglass 0.04
@ room temp) Expanded polystyrene
("beadboard") 0.03
A = Area of copper on pcb
Air (300 K, 100 kPa) 0.026
T = Temperature Silica aerogel 0.017
H = (K x A (THOT – TCOLD) / L
H = Energy conducted in time (joules/second)
K = Thermal conductivity of the copper (385 W/(m·K) @ room temp)
A = Area of GND plane
T = Temperature
L = Distance between hot and cold bodies