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Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC
performance of High Speed Interfaces
Presented on: March 13th, 2014
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS Interfaces
Johnson Controls Incorporated
Automotive Experience
Power Solutions
Building Efficiency
A global leader in automotive
seating, overhead systems,
door and instrument panels,
and interior electronics.
Global leader in lead-acid
automotive batteries and
advanced batteries for StartStop, hybrid and electric
vehicles.
A leading provider of
equipment, controls and
services for heating, ventilating,
air-conditioning, refrigeration,
and security systems for
buildings.
 Incorporated in 1885
 NYSE: JCI
 No. 67 on U.S. Fortune 500
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Johnson Controls
 Headquarters–Milwaukee, WI,
United States
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Design challenges in modern electronic modules
 New product features
 Innovative functions
 Modern yet familiar user interface
 Visual and functional appeal
 New challenging product requirements
 Functional requirements
 EMC requirements
 Mechanical and Thermal
 Demanding business targets
 Timing, cost and quality
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Design aids available for engineers
 Modern measurement equipment
 Simulation Tools
 Experienced engineering and support staff
 Professional publications and training materials
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC guidelines from professional publications
 EMC: Impact of vias in high speed signals
 EMC: GND plane size and presence of guard traces
Sometimes you get mixed signals on what is the right design approach.
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Signal-Integrity guidelines from professional publications
 Microstip vs. Stripline – Propagation delays, losses and crosstalk dilemma
Again you can see mixed messages.
What if you try to optimize design in both Signal Integrity and EMC areas?
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Case study
Purpose: Evaluate EMC performance of different clock net routing topologies,
in order to identify optimal solution for EMC and SI&TA performance.
Experiment #1:


Microstrip (MS) vs Stripline (SL) routing
Stripline with two vias vs MS/SL with eight vias (*)
Experiment #2:
 Using Gnd vs Power as a reference plane (*)
Experiment #3:
 MS top to bottom layers transition with and without GND stitching vias
Experiment #4:
 MS with nominal ZO vs MS with Zo increased by 15%
Experiment #5:
 Stripline (SL) vs MS with guard traces
(*) – assuming close coupling for signals and planes (under 4 mils or 100 um)
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Case study
Circuit topology implementation for test clock net
PCB stackup
 IC oscillator operated at 12 MHz, Clock Net length was 6 cm
 All CLK cases (except for CLK7) - signal routing use Layer1 and Layer 3 with Layer 4 being void
 CLK7 - signal routing use Layer1 and Layer 4 with Layer 3 being a power plane
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Case study
Experiment #1
Experiment #1
Experiment #3
Experiment #2
Vertical view of Clock Nets
Experiment #5
Experiment #5
Experiment #4
Experiment #2
Horizontal view of Clock Nets
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – RF Scan
RF scan at 84 MHz
All clock topologies
RF scan at 300 MHz
CLK1, CLK2 and CLK3
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation methods – Conducted Emissions
Block diagram of CE evaluation method
Actual setup with DUT
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation methods – Radiated Emissions CiSPR25
Block diagram of RE evaluation method
Actual setup with DUT
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #1 – Conducted Emissions - Raw Data
CLK1
CLK2
CLK3
Combined Plots
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #1 – Radiated Emissions - Raw Data
CLK1
CLK2
CLK3
Combined Plots RE
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #1
 Stripline net topology shown lowest emissions, for both CE and RE cases
 Microstrip net topology shown highest emissions, for both CE and RE cases
 Stripline with 8 vias does not perform worse than Microstrip (CE and RE)
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #2
 Stripline referenced to a Power Plane does not perform any worse then stripline
referenced to a Ground Plane (both CE and RE)
(*) – spacing between power and ground planes is 4 mils (100 um)
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #3
 Microstrip which transitions between Top and Bottom layers (8 vias) does not show
EMC improvements when ground Stitching Ground vias were added (RE & CE)
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #4
 Microstrip with characteristic impedance increased by 15% have shown small to
moderate increase in EMC emissions (RE & CE)
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation Results – Experiment #5
 Microstrip with ground guard traces has shown small improvement in EMC
performance (RE & CE) over Microstrip, but it does not perform better than Stripline
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Signal-Integrity and Timing Properties – Trace Topology Impedance
 Variation of the average trace impedance was within 8% from means for all nets
with exception for CLK17 (planned impedance increase by 15%)
 Presence of multiple vias results in substantial increase of maximum impedance
variation in the given net (CLK3, CLK5, CLK6)
(*) - Average trace impedance measured last three quarters length of the clock net
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Signal-Integrity and Timing Properties – Time Domain Response
 Average rise time distortion had shown strong differentiation between clock net
topology cases, but its value has remained low (under 3%)
 Clock net topology has little impact on worst case rise time distortion measurement
(*) – Rise time was evaluated between CMOS VIL & VIH levels (30% & 70% of VCC)
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
EMC evaluation results - Conclusions
Results:
Evaluation case:

emissions
of Stripline
always
lower than
Microstrip,
 EMC
Single
driver and(RE&CE)
single receiver
withwere
a series
termination,
6 cm
long trace
even with presence of 8 vias (performance no worse than MS)
 8 layer PCB with closely spaced layers (100 um)
 EMC emissions (RE&CE) have not been affected by changing signal
 reference
12 MHz low
jitter
sourcetowas
used
with(closely
rise timespaced
of 1.4 ns
(20%100
to 80
%)
from
ground
power
plane
planes
um)
 EMC emission performance of Microstrip transitioning between top and
bottom layers was much worse, than that of a Stripline, addition of ground
stitching vias has not affected EMC performance
 Increase of Zo has resulted in increase of EMC emissions (RE&CE)
 EMC emissions of Microstrip with guard trace were slightly lower than of
Microstrip, but worse than Stripline
 Presence of vias and reference plane changes affects negatively
transition time, but for clock frequencies under 200 MHz its impact is
negligible
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Appendix 1
Publications referenced in the presentation:
1. Modeling and Analysis of Return Path Discontinuity Caused by Vias
using the 3-Conductor Model, A. Ege Engin, IEEE transactions 2003
2. Reduction of Printer Circuit Board Radiated Emissions, Frank B.J.
Leferink
3. Summary of Design Techniques, TBD
4. High-Speed Board Layout Guidelines, Altera Application Note 224,
August 2009
5. EMC Design Guideline for Microcontroller Board Layout, Infineon
Application Note 1999-07
6. Dramatic Noise Reduction using Guard Traces with Optimized Shorting
Vias, Eric Bogatin,DesignCon 2013
Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Appendix 2 – Simulation setup
33Ω
Clock Trace
Source
(Gaussian Pulse)
Load
6.8 pF
Simulation Settings:
Broad band e-field (far-field) probes
1m away – In all 6 directions
Tool
Boundary Condition
Back ground Space
Frequency
Meshing
Mesh cells
Solver
Frequency Samples
: CST Microwave Studio
: Open add space
: 10mm in all directions
: 0 - 3 GHz
: Hexahedral
: ~ 1.5 Million
: Time domain
: 3001
Note: Simulation setup does not evaluate the same type of EMC performance which was evaluated via testing.
Purpose of those simulations is to evaluate e-field radiation pattern in Z direction above the PCB.
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Impact of PCB routing techniques on EMC performance of HS interfaces
Appendix 2 – Simulation results Experiment 1 and Experiment 2
 Simulation results confirm that emissions from stripline routing topology
(CLK2) are smaller than that from microstrip (CLK1)
 Simulation results indicate that there is small variation between emission
from microstrip transitioning between top and bottom layers, in cases
when ground stitching vias were present or absent
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