Abstract

AbstractThe frequency at the peak of electromagnetic radiation from a PCB (Printed Circuit Board) as a result of ground bounce is considered predictable from the frequency characteristics of the input impedance between the power supply and ground layer (below called the PCB impedance). However, the relationship is largely unknown. In this paper, the electromagnetic radiation of the PCB and the frequency spectrum of the PCB impedance are analyzed by the FDTD (Finite‐Difference Time‐Domain) method and their relational mechanism is studied by comparison with the measured values. It is found that the peak of the electromagnetic radiation appears at the frequency where the PCB is a minimum if the PCB is excited by a voltage source with an internal resistance sufficiently smaller than the PCB impedance, and that this peak is shifted toward the frequency at which the PCB impedance becomes a maximum if the internal resistance is increased. The radiation power ratio derived from the resistive components (called the resonant resistances) at two frequencies where the PCB impedance is maximum and minimum (resonant frequencies) mostly agrees with the ratio of the squares of the radiated electric field. Hence, the radiation peak frequencies of the PCB are determined both by the internal resistance of the excitation source and the resonant resistance of the PCB impedance. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Electron Comm Jpn Pt 1, 87(11): 30–38, 2004; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/ecja.10209

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