There are many critical signals that require
specific care during board design:
- Analog input signals
- CLK and SYSREF
- LVDS data outputs at up to
1.6Gbps
- Power connections
- Ground connections
Items 1 and 2 must be routed for excellent signal
quality at high frequencies. Use the following general practices for these
signals:
- Route using loosely coupled
100Ω differential traces. This routing minimizes impact of corners and
length-matching serpentine on pair impedance.
- Provide adequate pair-to-pair
spacing to minimize crosstalk.
- Provide adequate ground plane
pour spacing to minimize coupling with the high-speed traces.
- Use smoothly radiused
corners. Avoid 45- or 90-degree bends.
- Incorporate ground plane
cutouts at component landing pads to avoid impedance discontinuities at
these locations. Cutout below the landing pads on one or multiple ground
planes to achieve a pad size or stackup height that achieves the needed
50-Ω, single-ended impedance.
- Avoid routing traces near
irregularities in the reference ground planes. Irregularities include ground
plane clearances associated with power and signal vias and through-hole
component leads.
- Provide symmetrically located
ground tie vias adjacent to any high-speed signal vias.
- When high-speed signals must
transition to another layer using vias, transition as far through the board
as possible (top to bottom is best case) to minimize via stubs on top or
bottom of the vias. If layer selection is not flexible, use back-drilled or
buried, blind vias to eliminate stubs.
The LVDS data outputs must be routed with
sufficient signal quality using the following general practices:
- Route using tightly coupled
100Ω differential traces to minimize the routing area and decrease crosstalk
between adjacent data pairs.
- Use smoothly radiused corners
or 45-degree bends. Avoid 90-degree bends.
- Avoid routing traces near
irregularities in the reference ground planes. Irregularities include ground
plane clearances associated with power and signal vias and through-hole
component leads.
- Provide symmetrically located
ground tie vias adjacent to any high-speed signal vias.
- Data, clock, and strobe pairs
must be sufficiently delay matched to provide adequate timing margin at the
receiver. If routing on multiple layers, trace lengths must be compensated
for the delay mismatch introduced by the effective dielectric constant of
each layer.
In addition, TI recommends performing signal quality simulations of the critical signal traces before committing to fabrication. Perform insertion loss, return loss, and time domain reflectometry (TDR) evaluations.
The power and ground connections for the device
are also very important. These rules must be followed:
- Provide low-resistance
connection paths to all power and ground pins.
- Use multiple power layers if
necessary to access all pins.
- Avoid narrow isolated paths
that increase connection resistance.
- Use a signal, ground, or
power circuit board stackup to maximum coupling between the ground and power
planes.