Abstract

The modern era of technology contains a myriad of high-speed standards and proprietary serial digital protocols, which evolve alongside the microwave and RF realm. The increasing data rate push the requirements for hardware design, including modern printed circuit boards (PCB). One of these requirements for modern high-speed PCB interfaces are a homogenous track impedance all the way from the source to the load. Even though some high-speed interfaces don’t require any external components embedded into the interconnects, there are others which require either passive or active components—or both. Usually, component package land-pads are of fixed size, thus, if not addressed, they create discontinuities and degrade the transmitted signal. To solve this problem, impedance compensation techniques such as reference plane cut-out are employed for multiple case studies covering this topic. This paper presents an original method of finding the optimal cut-out size for the maximum characteristic impedance compensation in high-density multilayer PCB designs, which has been verified via theoretical estimation, computer simulation, and practical measurement results. Track-to-discontinuity ratios of 1:1.75, 1:2.5, and 1:5.0 were selected in order to resemble most practical design scenarios on a 6-layer standard thickness PCB. The measurements and simulations revealed that the compensated impedance saturation occurs at (150–250%) cut-out widths for a 50 Ω microstrip.

Highlights

  • A growing number of high-speed standards and proprietary serial protocols are posing major design layout challenges for modern printed circuit board (PCB) designers

  • The following categories and design scenarios can be distinguished based on the results presented in Table 1: 1

  • Structures with different track-to-discontinuity ratios were selected according to Table

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Summary

Introduction

A growing number of high-speed standards and proprietary serial protocols are posing major design layout challenges for modern printed circuit board (PCB) designers These serial standards include Universal Serial Bus [1], PCIe Gen and PCIe Gen, Gbps Ethernet [2], LVDS [3], Serial RapidIO® (SRIO) [4], Common Public Radio Interface (CPRI) [5], Double Data Rate (DDR) [6], OBSAI, SD/HD/3G/ASI Serial Digital Interface (SDI), XAUI and Reduced XAUI (RXAUI), HiGig/HiGig+, SATA/Serial Attached SCSI (SAS), GPON, SerialLite II, Fiber Channel, SONET/SDH, Interlaken, Serial Data Converter (JESD204), SFI-5, and a host of others [7].

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