PCB Design for 1 Gbps

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PCB Design for 1 Gbps. ECE 4006B Dr Brooke. Overview. What signals are being routed? How can you route those signals? How to apply routing to PCB? PCB design techniques. Signals being routed. High Frequency Sensitive Analog (e.g., IN from PD) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of PCB Design for 1 Gbps

PCB Design for 1 Gbps

ECE 4006B

Dr Brooke

Overview

• What signals are being routed?

• How can you route those signals?

• How to apply routing to PCB?

• PCB design techniques

Signals being routed

• High Frequency Sensitive Analog (e.g., IN from PD)• High Frequency: Data, and Noisy Analog (e.g., +OUT

from Limiting Amp, +OUT from VCSEL driver)• Low Frequency sensitive : Bias, Analog (e.g., DC

Power on input side of most chips esp. TIA)• Low Frequency insensitive: Bias, Analog (e.g., DC

Power on output side of most chips, low frequency data)

Signal Type Matrix

• Red = Challenging, Yellow =Care needed, Green = Easy

Sensitivity

Frequency

high low

high high/high, e.g., TIA input

high/low, e.g., VCSEL driver

outputs

Lowlow/high,

e.g., input side power

low/low, e.g., output side

power

Different Types NeedDifferent Treatment

• High Frequency/High Sensitivity– Transmission lines, return path (decoupling), Shielding from high frequency

• High Frequency/Low Sensitivity– Transmission lines, prevent coupling to sensitive

• Low Frequency/High Sensitivity– Shielding from high frequency, return path (ground loops),

• Low Frequency/Low Sensitivity– Low Frequency decoupling, Resistive Loss

High Frequency/High Sensitivity

– Transmission line issues– Signal return path issues (decoupling) – Shielding from high Frequency

Transmission line issues

• What is a Transmission line? What is not?

• How to avoid (short lines)

• How to use (50 ohms)

• Non traditional transmission lines (turns, tapers)

¼ wavelength or greater = transmission line = 5 cm

What is a Transmission line

• Less that 1/10 of a wavelength use arbitrary geometry connections• More that ¼ wave length use wideband RF design techniques for

geometry (stripline, coplanar)• In between use special angles, tapers, curves

EM wave

1 wavelength =

rf

c

1/10 wavelength or less = wire = 2 cm

= 20 cm @ 500 MHz, 3r

What is a Transmission line• What frequency to use? • Gbps data ~ 500 MHz sq wave (10101010…)

Square Wave = 1st + 3rd + 5th … Harmonics

Using up to 5th harmonic has eye closure ~15%

Using up to 3rd harmonic has eye closure ~30%

Using only 1st harmonic has eye closure ~50%

How to avoid Transmission lines?• Depending on eye you want chose appropriate harmonic length to be less than a 1/10 th of a wavelength

First Harmonic = 1/10 * 20 cm = 2 cm

Second harmonic (present in real data) = 2 cm / 2 = 1 cm

Third Harmonic = 6.7 mm

FourthHarmonic= 5 mm

FifthHarmonic= 4 mm

How to avoid Transmission lines?

For Gigabit Ethernet• Nice eye for lines less than 4 mm not a transmission line

• OK eye for lines less than 7 mm not a transmission line

• Poor eye for lines less than 2 cm not a transmission line

How to use Transmission Lines

• Terminate them in design impedance

• Ensure high frequency return path– Signal returns along the shield of Coax

50 ohms

“sees” 50 ohms immediately between core and shield - nothing else if terminated properly - “echo” after 2 x transmission delay otherwise

Signal arrives after transmission delay.

How to use Transmission Lines

• Special Case for Balanced Differential Signals– Connect shields together

Balanced = equal and opposite

+

-OUTGND 100 ohms

+OUT

+

How to use Transmission Lines

• Eliminate reflective features larger than 1/10th of a wavelength

• Avoid impendence changes

OK

BAD1/10th wavelength

1/10th wavelength

45 deg

45 deg

Non traditional transmission lines (curves, tapers)

• If you want to use these features either:– Do it in the transition region between 1/10th and

¼ wavelength– Or use an RF design tool (e.g., ADS) to verify

operation with finite element analysis

Signal return path issues (decoupling)

• Every High Frequency outp

Shielding from high Frequency

High Frequency/Low Sensitivity

– Transmission line issues– prevent coupling to sensitive

Low Frequency/High Sensitivity

• Shielding from high frequency• Return path (ground loops)

Low Frequency/Low Sensitivity

• Low Frequency decoupling• Resistive Loss

How to apply routing to PCB

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PCB design techniques

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