SPRAD64 November 2022 AM620-Q1 , AM623 , AM625 , AM625-Q1
PCB stack-up is one of the first and important considerations in realizing a successful PCB. The AM62x (AMC) device supports a BGA array or 21 × 21 with a 0.8-mm pitch and a body size of 17.2 mm. Due to the number of rows of signal balls around the periphery, TI recommends two signal routing layers. PDN compliance and robustness is critical to meet all the performance objectives of the device and associated peripherals. To enable this, TI recommends allocating two layers for power planes. Ground planes must be added adjacent to the power planes and adjacent to the outer layers for shielding and controlled impedance routing. High speed interfaces such as DDR, CSI, and USB require ground planes for impedance matching. Additionally, to meet the higher DDR interface speeds, ground layers both above and below the DDR signals are recommended. The escapes and routing on the AM62x (AMC) board design was achieved with 8 layers, as shown in Table 3-1.
PCB Layer | Layer Routing, Planes or Pours |
---|---|
Layer 1 | Component pads, Ground and signal escapes |
Layer 2 | Ground |
Layer 3 | Signal Routing |
Layer 4 | Ground/Power |
Layer 5 | Power/Ground |
Layer 6 | Signal Routing |
Layer 7 | Ground |
Layer 8 | Bottom |
An example 8-layer board stack-up for AM62x (AMC) is described above. This board is designed for optimum signal integrity on the high-speed interfaces while limiting the board size. The AM62x (AMC) board is implemented without HDI (High Density Interconnect) and does not use micro vias, which are both intended to save board cost. All vias on the AM62x (AMC) board are Plated Through Hole (PTH) and pass completely through the board. Proper analysis are performed to validate both signal and power integrity, if further optimizations are required to reduce PCB stack-up and/or routing rules illustrated in this document.