For the TDP158 on a high-K
board, it is required to solder the PowerPAD™ onto the thermal land to ground. A
thermal land is the area of solder-tinned-copper
underneath the PowerPAD™ package. On a high-K
board the TDP158 can operate
over the full temperature range by soldering the
PowerPAD™ onto the thermal land. On a low-K board,
for the device to operate across the temperature
range on a low-K board, a 1-oz Cu trace connecting
the GND pins to the thermal land must be used. A
simulation shows RθJA = 100.84°C/W
allowing 545mW power dissipation at 70°C ambient
temperature. A general PCB design guide for
PowerPAD packages is provided in the document
SLMA002. TI recommends using a four layer
stack up at a minimum to accomplish a low-EMI PCB
design. TI recommends six layers as the TDP158 is a two voltage rail
device.
- Routing the high-speed TMDS traces on the top layer avoids the use of vias,
avoids the introduction of their inductances, and
allows for clean interconnects from the HDMI
connectors to the Redriver inputs and outputs. It
is important to match the electrical length of
these high speed traces to minimize both
inter-pair and intra-pair skew.
- Placing a solid ground plane next to the high-speed single layer establishes controlled impedance for transmission link interconnects and provides an excellent low –inductance path for the return current flow.
- Placing a power plane next to the ground plane creates and additional high-frequency bypass capacitance.
- Routing slower seed control signals on the bottom layer allows for greater flexibility as these signal links usually have margin to tolerate discontinuities such as vias.
- If an additional supply voltage plane or signal layer is needed, add a second power/ground plane system to the stack to keep symmetry. This makes the stack mechanically stable and prevents it from warping. Also the power and ground plane of each power system can be place closer together, thus increasing the high frequency bypass capacitance significantly.