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Electrical and Computer Engineering

Missouri University of Science and Technology

2001

Printed Circuits

Articles 1 - 10 of 10

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Emi Mitigation With Multilayer Power-Bus Stacks And Via Stitching Of Reference Planes, Xiaoning Ye, David M. Hockanson, Min Li, Yong Ren, Wei Cui, James L. Drewniak, Richard E. Dubroff Nov 2001

Emi Mitigation With Multilayer Power-Bus Stacks And Via Stitching Of Reference Planes, Xiaoning Ye, David M. Hockanson, Min Li, Yong Ren, Wei Cui, James L. Drewniak, Richard E. Dubroff

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

General methods for reducing printed circuit board (PCB) emissions over a broad band of high frequencies are necessary to meet EMI requirements, as processors become faster and more powerful. One mechanism by which EMI can be coupled off a PCB or multichip module (MCM) structure is from high-frequency fringing electric fields on the dc power and reference planes at the substrate periphery An approach for EMI mitigation by stitching multiple ground planes together along the periphery of multilayer PCB power-bus stacks with closely spaced vias is reported and quantified in this paper. Power-bus noise induced EMI and coupling from the …


Dc Power Bus Noise Isolation With Power Islands, Wei Cui, Jun Fan, Hao Shi, James L. Drewniak Aug 2001

Dc Power Bus Noise Isolation With Power Islands, Wei Cui, Jun Fan, Hao Shi, James L. Drewniak

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

Segmented power planes are often used for DC power bus noise isolation in multi-layered printed circuit board (PCB) designs. To achieve a desirable noise isolation, different power plane segmentations can be used. A suitable modeling approach, as well as measurements, were employed to study the power bus isolation with several power plane segmentation configurations. The studied geometries included power island designs connected with a conducting bridge, a ferrite bead, and a π-filter. In addition, different conducting bridge widths and power island gap widths were analyzed, and compared. The modeled and measured results show that power plane segmentations with proper designs …


Differential Signalling In Pcbs: Modeling And Validation Of Dielectric Losses And Effects Of Discontinuities, R. Araneo, Chen Wang, Xiaoxiong Gu, S. Celozzi, James L. Drewniak Aug 2001

Differential Signalling In Pcbs: Modeling And Validation Of Dielectric Losses And Effects Of Discontinuities, R. Araneo, Chen Wang, Xiaoxiong Gu, S. Celozzi, James L. Drewniak

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

This paper focuses on differential signal transmission above ground planes with gaps, taking into account the dielectric and conductive losses of the substrate. An equivalent lumped-circuit is proposed and its suitability is investigated by comparing the obtained numerical results with the measured data. Furthermore the differential to common mode conversion of the waves, while crossing the gap, is theoretically analyzed and experimentally verified.


Grounding Of Heatpipe/Heatspreader And Heatsink Structures For Emi Mitigation, Chen Wang, James L. Drewniak, D. Wang, Ray Alexander, James L. Knighten, David M. Hockanson Aug 2001

Grounding Of Heatpipe/Heatspreader And Heatsink Structures For Emi Mitigation, Chen Wang, James L. Drewniak, D. Wang, Ray Alexander, James L. Knighten, David M. Hockanson

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

EMI problems caused by the presence of heatpipe/heatspreader and heatsink structures in a high-speed design are well known in engineering practice. High-frequency noise can be coupled from IC packages to an electrically conductive heatsink or heatspreader attached to the IC, which then is radiated, or the energy coupled to an enclosure cavity mode. This EMI coupling path was modeled with the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method, and a mitigation approach was investigated. Good agreement between measurements and FDTD modeling is demonstrated, indicating FDTD is a suitable tool for analysis and design. Then, several grounding schemes suitable for a heatsink or heatspreader …


Mitigating Power Bus Noise With Embedded Capacitance In Pcb Designs, Minjia Xu, Todd H. Hubing, Juan Chen, James L. Drewniak, Thomas Van Doren, Richard E. Dubroff Aug 2001

Mitigating Power Bus Noise With Embedded Capacitance In Pcb Designs, Minjia Xu, Todd H. Hubing, Juan Chen, James L. Drewniak, Thomas Van Doren, Richard E. Dubroff

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

This paper investigates the power bus noise and power bus impedance of printed circuit boards with four different kinds of embedded capacitance. These boards have power-ground plane pairs separated by a very thin layer of material with high dielectric permittivity. It is shown that embedded capacitance effectively reduces power bus noise over the entire frequency range evaluated (up to 5 GHz).


Investigation Of Pcb Layout Parasitics In Emi Filtering Of I/O Lines, Xiaoning Ye, Geping Liu, James L. Drewniak Aug 2001

Investigation Of Pcb Layout Parasitics In Emi Filtering Of I/O Lines, Xiaoning Ye, Geping Liu, James L. Drewniak

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

EMI filters are often utilized on I/O lines to reduce high-frequency noise from being conducted or coupled off the PCB and resulting in an EMI problem. However, layout parasitics are usually inevitable in practical circuit design, and the filtering performance may vary. In this study, the impact of the board layout on the filtering performance is investigated by |S21| measurements of sample PCB boards with different filter layouts. The finite-difference time-domain method is applied to model the boards, support the experimental work, and can be used to provide a means for conducting "what-if" engineering studies.


Fdtd And Experimental Investigation Of Emi From Stacked-Card Pcb Configurations, David M. Hockanson, Xiaoning Ye, James L. Drewniak, Todd H. Hubing, Thomas Van Doren, Richard E. Dubroff Feb 2001

Fdtd And Experimental Investigation Of Emi From Stacked-Card Pcb Configurations, David M. Hockanson, Xiaoning Ye, James L. Drewniak, Todd H. Hubing, Thomas Van Doren, Richard E. Dubroff

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

Stacked-card and modules-on-backplane printed circuit-board geometries are advantageous for conserving real-estate in many designs. Unfortunately, at high frequencies, electromagnetic magnetic interference (EMI) resulting from the nonnegligible impedance of the signal return at the connector may occur. This effective EMI coupling path results in the daughtercard being driven against the motherboard and attached cables, resulting in common-mode radiation. The connector geometry can be modified to minimize the EMI coupling path when high frequencies are routed between the motherboard and daughtercard. Current speeds and printed circuit board (PCB) sizes result in geometries that are of significant dimensions in terms of a wavelength …


Challenge Problem Update: Peec And Mom Analysis Of A Pc Board With Long Wires Attached, H. Wang, Todd H. Hubing, Bruce Archambeault Jan 2001

Challenge Problem Update: Peec And Mom Analysis Of A Pc Board With Long Wires Attached, H. Wang, Todd H. Hubing, Bruce Archambeault

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

At the 2000 IEEE International Symposium on EMC, a paper was presented by Y. Ji et al. (paper appears in 2001 proceedings) that compared the application of PEEC and MOM techniques to the analysis of one of the EMC Society/Applied Computational Electromagnetics Society special challenge problems. Good agreement was obtained between the two codes at 2 out of the 3 measurement ports. At that time, no definite explanation was provided for the discrepancy at the third port. This paper shows that the problem was (at least partly) related to assumptions made about the signal source


Applying The Method Of Moments And The Partial Element Equivalent Circuit Modeling Techniques To A Special Challenge Problem Of A Pc Board With Long Wires Attached, Yun Ji, Bruce Archambeault, Todd H. Hubing Jan 2001

Applying The Method Of Moments And The Partial Element Equivalent Circuit Modeling Techniques To A Special Challenge Problem Of A Pc Board With Long Wires Attached, Yun Ji, Bruce Archambeault, Todd H. Hubing

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

This paper investigates a canonical printed circuit board (PCB) problem using both a method of moments (MoM) and a partial element equivalent circuit (PEEC) modeling technique. The problem consists of a PCB populated with three traces. One trace is a signal line and the other two are I/O lines that couple to the signal line and extend beyond the boundary of the board. Although the MoM code was a frequency domain code and the PEEC code was a time-domain code, good agreement was achieved in both the time-domain and the frequency-domain


Estimation Of Printed Circuit Board Power Bus Noise At Resonance Using A Simple Transmission Line Model, H. Hu, Todd H. Hubing, Thomas Van Doren Jan 2001

Estimation Of Printed Circuit Board Power Bus Noise At Resonance Using A Simple Transmission Line Model, H. Hu, Todd H. Hubing, Thomas Van Doren

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

The maximum coupling between printed circuit board components connected to the same power-ground plane pair often occurs at or near power bus resonances. Theoretically, the transfer coefficient, S 21 , between two locations on the power bus can be as high as 0dB (i.e. perfect coupling) near resonant frequencies. However, in practice the coupling is usually much less due to losses in the power bus structure. Determining exactly what the maximum coupling will be in a lossy power bus structure requires a numerical model or measurement. However, an estimation of the maximum coupling can be obtained by drawing an analogy …