Working with high-speed PCB designs can add an extra layer (no pun intended) of complexity to your board. Foolproof techniques at low speeds can become unreliable with faster rise/fall times inherent to digital systems. However, these problems are not insurmountable: an experienced high-speed PCB manufacturer can navigate potential issues at the board level and throughout manufacturing to limit their deleterious impact. With over forty years of experience in cutting-edge PCB designs, VSE can ensure your design is manufacturing-ready throughout product development.
Analyzing Design Elements with a High-Speed PCB Manufacturer
Objective | Challenge | Solution | |
---|---|---|---|
Trace | Connect two or more pins of a design for electrical continuity. | Adds inductance and capacitance. | Exchange lossy FR4 material for high-speed substrate. |
Plane pour | A power or reference plane that acts as a high-frequency capacitor. | Stray capacitance on signal traces. | Avoid grid/hatched planes for minimal inductance. |
Via | Interplanar connectivity. | Adds inductance and capacitance. | Minimize via usage as much as possible. |
In the old days of PCB design and manufacturing, continuity was king – speeds were low enough that there was no need to worry about changes in performance. Signal speeds were so slow relative to today’s numbers that the board was essentially a passive element from a design perspective. No longer: signal speed propagation is significant enough that failure to account for its effects can ultimately scrap a board.
Interestingly, the most pronounced effect of high speed has nothing to do with the layout explicitly. The board substrate – the material that provides insulation and rigidity to a standard board profile – encounters greater losses and timing delays as signal speeds increase due to its anisotropic nature, which affects signal propagation. The glass fiber weave and epoxy resin typical of FR4s and similar laminates differ enough in electrical characteristics that signals traveling fast enough will have different speeds through them. The nonhomogeneity of the material distribution produces an anisotropy that can make signals superficially appear to have identical electrical backgrounds that are considerably distinct. Even the weight and size of the copper encounter challenges at high speeds due to the skin effect that concentrates current toward the conductor’s surface.