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Signal Integrity:: Applied Electromagnetics and Professional Practice

This document discusses transmission lines and their characteristic impedance (Z0). It begins by explaining what a transmission line is and how signals propagate down the line as electromagnetic waves in the dielectric between conductors, not as electrons moving. It then derives the calculation for Z0 based on the distributed inductance and capacitance per unit length of the transmission line. The document describes how reflections occur at the termination point if the load impedance does not match the characteristic impedance of the line. It provides models for calculating Z0 and propagation delay of common transmission line structures and analyzes the behavior of signals terminating at loads with different impedances than Z0.

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Kashif Hassan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views44 pages

Signal Integrity:: Applied Electromagnetics and Professional Practice

This document discusses transmission lines and their characteristic impedance (Z0). It begins by explaining what a transmission line is and how signals propagate down the line as electromagnetic waves in the dielectric between conductors, not as electrons moving. It then derives the calculation for Z0 based on the distributed inductance and capacitance per unit length of the transmission line. The document describes how reflections occur at the termination point if the load impedance does not match the characteristic impedance of the line. It provides models for calculating Z0 and propagation delay of common transmission line structures and analyzes the behavior of signals terminating at loads with different impedances than Z0.

Uploaded by

Kashif Hassan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Signal Integrity:

Applied Electromagnetics and Professional Practice

CHAPTER 6
DISTRIBUTED ANALYSIS: TRANSMISSION LINES AND Z 0

LECTURE SLIDES BY DR. SAMUEL H. RUSS


UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH ALABAMA
CHAPTER 6 OBJECTIVES

• Explain what a transmission line is


• Explain derivation of characteristic impedance (Z0)
• Describe reflections on improperly terminated lines
• Calculate and simulate transmission lines
• Calculate the correct impedance
• Describe different termination strategies
• Diagnose and deal with termination issues
WHERE ARE TRANSMISSION
LINES?
• Maxwell’s equations predicted a world where energy can
radiate and cause voltages miles away
• Hertz used this to build radios
• Einstein keyed off of the “speed of light” to derive relativity
• Transmission lines have relativistic effects
• The destination does not know what is happening at the source
• Also, the signal arrives at the end of a transmission line nearly
intact
• Makes them very useful for carrying information
SO HOW DOES IT WORK?

• Start with 1 meter of RG-11 coaxial cable


• It has 53 pF of capacitance and 299 nH of inductance
• (Yes, that is the datasheet value for RG-11…)
• If you double the length, both double…
• So RG-11 has CL = 53pF/m of capacitance and LL =
299 nH/m of inductance
LAUNCH A SIGNAL…

• Start with RG-11 at ground


• Center conductor and shield at same voltage
• Apply a 50 ps rising edge to the input
• The higher voltage creates an E field between the center
conductor and shield (in the insulator, right?)
• This E field races down the cable at a fraction of the speed
of light

• Very important: The E field races, not the electrons!!


VIEWING THE RISING EDGE
Changing E field
inside cable
Coaxial Cable

t = t1

Point X

t = t2

Point Y
SO WHAT IS HAPPENING?

• From t1 to t2, the rising edge moves down the


cable from point X to point Y
• This is only possible if current is being
sourced into the cable to charge up the
cable’s capacitance
• Remember the E field lies inside a capacitor!
SO HOW MUCH CHARGE IS
NEEDED? Coaxial Cable

Length Y-X
Point X Point Y
Rising edge
moves down
the cable
• The capacitance is CL x (Y-X)
• The voltage is the voltage swing, call it “V”
• Charge = (Y-X) CLV
HOW FAST DOES IT GO?
1
• Maxwell’s formula for speed is
1
• So the speed down this particular lineC L is
L L

• To get from point X to point Y, it takes a time


t  (Y by
interval equal to distance divided  X speed:
) C L LL
HOW MUCH CURRENT IS NEEDED?
Q (Y  X )C LV CL
I  V
t (Y  X ) C L LL LL
• This is the current needed at the source to keep
the rising edge racing down the transmission line.
• It is linearly proportional to the voltage V
• And what do we call a linear proportionality of
current and voltage?
• Resistance! This is a purely real resistance.
REARRANGE THE TERMS…
LL LL
V I  IZ 0  Z0
CL CL

• So Z0 is the ratio of the desired voltage swing


to the current needed to create that swing on
a distributed line
• With capacitance per length CL and inductance
per length LL

• It is a purely real resistance


INGREDIENTS OF Z0

• Distributed system (transmission line)


• System has CL and LL
• CL and LL dictate the speed of propagation
• Electric charge must be pumped into the line to charge the
capacitance at a rate sufficient to keep up with the speed
• Units of distance cancel out – left with only C L and LL
• To the driving gate, the cable looks like a real, actual
resistor of value Z0 to ground
EXAMPLE

• What is the Z0 of RG-11 cable?


298.7n 298700
Z0    5625  75
53.1 p 53.1

• This is why it is called a “75-ohm cable”


SO WHAT IS HAPPENING?

• What is moving down the line?


• An electromagnetic wave, a changing E field
• Not individual electrons – they move much more slowly
• Just like waves can move on an ocean faster than the water
• Where is it located?
• In the dielectric between the conductors!
HOW I REMEMBER IT…

• When you upload a selfie from your cell phone,


how does it travel?
• Through the air from your phone to the cell tower
• In other words, the signal is in the insulator while it
is traveling
• On a circuit board, the signal is in the insulator
between the signal trace and ground plane!
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE?

• Return to our example…


• The time is equal to the length divided by the speed
• For length l T0  l C L LL where T0 is the one-way
transmission time

• What is T0 for 1m of RG-11?T  1 53.1 p  298.7n  1 3.98n  3.98ns


0

• By comparison, c = 3.33 ns/m, so RG-11 is a little


slower
ESTIMATING Z0 AND Tp:
MICROSTRIP
87  5.98h 
Z0  ln  
 r  1.41  0.8w  t 
r T p  85 0.475 r  0.67

Note that h, w, and t are in mils and TP is in


ps/inch.
ESTIMATING Z0 AND Tp: STRIPLINE
60  1.9b 
Z0  ln  
 r  0.8w  t 
r
T p  85  r

Note that b, w, and t are in mils and TP is in


ps/inch.
EXAMPLE

• Trace is laid out microstrip over FR-4 (εr=4.2).


It is 5 mils wide and lies 5 mils over the
ground plane. The board uses 1-ounce
copper.
Z 
87 What
 5.98is
ln
 5 Z 0 and Tp?
  36.7 ln(5.53)  62.8
0
4.2  1.41  0.8  5  1.4 

T p  85 0.475  4.2  0.67  85 2.665  138.8 ps / in


SIDEBAR: LUMPED MODEL OF
TRANSMISSION LINE
• The first transmission lines were telegraph
lines
• So the model for them is called the “telegrapher’s
equation”
R R R
• Model treats the line as a large number of
LM G LM G LM G
lumped elements…
CM CM CM
R R R
SO WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE
WAVE HITS THE OTHER END?
• So the gate launched a rising edge into 1 m of RG-11 cable.
What happens 3.98 ns later?
• It depends!
• The “other end” is called the “load”
• The weird part is that the load is so far from the source that it
doesn’t “know” what is going on there
• If the resistance of the load does not match the resistance of
the line, there is either an excess or deficit of current: causes
reflections
INTRODUCING REFLECTIONS

• If ZL > Z0, there is too much current for the load


• Positive reflection of current back into the line
• … because of the excess
• If ZL < Z0, there is not enough current for the load
• Negative reflection of current back into the line
• … as if the load is “asking” for more current
MODELING REFLECTIONS

• An incident current and


II IR IT
Transmission Line voltage emerge from the line
+ • Part is transmitted to the load
VI +
- and part is reflected into the
Z0 VT RL line
+ -
VR • Use I, T, R subscripts…
-
• Z0 is impedance of line and RL
is impedance of load
Goal: Calculate ratio
SO WHAT DO WE KNOW?

• We know Z0 and RL, • Voltages at load must


so equal
• II=VI/Z0 • VI+VR=VL
• IR=VR/Z0 • Currents must add up
• IT=VT/RL • II=IR+IL
CONTINUE THE ANALYSIS…

• Substitute into the • Now add and


current equation: subtract to the
VI VR VT
Z0

Z0

RL voltage

2V  V 1 
Z 0equation…


R T  RL 
• And so… 
Z 0VT  Z0 
VI  VR  
2V I  VT 1  
RL  RL 

• … then divide
FINISH IT OUT

• We call VR/VI the reflection


 Z0 
1   coefficient at the load
VR 

RL   RL  Z 0   • Denote it ρL
L
VI  Z0  R  Z
1   L 0
• If RL>Z0: Positive reflection
 RL 
• If RL<Z0: Negative reflection
• If RL=Z0: No reflection
WHAT ABOUT THE LOAD ITSELF?

• Define VL/VI as the • This lets us calculate


transmission the transmitted
coefficient at the load voltage (voltage at
• Recall VI+VR=VL the load) as a
VI  VR
 1 L 
VT
 TL function of incident
VI VI
voltage
SO, START OVER…

• Waveform is injected at the • The reflection travels back


source up the line in time T0
• Travels down the line in • Hits the source
time T0 • Some is transmitted to the
source
• Hits the load
• Some is transmitted to load • Some is reflected back to line
• Some is reflected back to line • And so on…
LET’S DO AN EXAMPLE…
• Line has Z0=50Ω. RS=10Ω, RL=5MΩ.
• Line was quiescently at +4V and so falling edge = -4V.
• Plot what happens in units of T0.
• ρL = (5M-50)/(5M+50) = 1. TL = 1+ ρL = 2.
• ρS = (10-50)/(10+50) = -2/3. TS = 1+ ρS = +1/3.
• One more thing: Source is a resistor divider (10-ohm
source into 50-ohm line). So only 5/6 of falling edge
goes into line
SIMPLE MODEL FOR CIRCUIT
Source Load

+0.833

Line

1/3 -2/3 +1 +2
TS ρS ρL TL

Vsource Vload
+4.000 +4.000
-3.333
CAN CONSTRUCT A BOUNCE
1/3 -2/3 +1 +2

DIAGRAM TS ρS ρL TL

Vsource Vload
+4.000 +4.000
-3.333
-3.333
+0.666
-3.333 -6.666
-2.666
-1.111 +2.222
-0.445
+2.222 +4.444
+1.778
+0.741 -1.481
+0.296
-1.481 -2.961
-1.183
-0.493 +0.987
-0.197
+0.987 +1.974
+0.791
SO WHAT REALLY HAPPENS?

Reflecting voltage
(voltage at load)
INTERPRET THE RESULTS

• The voltage at the load really does bounce up


and down like that!
• That is why it is called reflection
• It looks just like ringing … but it isn’t!
• Caused by an impedance mismatch
• Completely different physical origin than ringing
WHY IS IT BAD?

• Why is this ringing-like behavior bad?


• OK, it is like ringing in this sense…
• The second reflection looks like an extra logic
transition
WHAT ABOUT T→∞?

• As time gets longer, line becomes lumped


again…
• The line turns back into a short-circuit (wire)
• Load resistance is a DC load to the source
TERMINATING IMPEDANCE

• How do we eliminate reflections?


• Set terminating resistance equal to Z0
• Load termination: wave travels down line, hits load,
does not reflect
• Source termination: wave has ½ resistor divider, 100%
reflection off load, comes back to source and stops
EXAMPLES OF DIFFERENT
TERMINATIONS
Transmission Line Transmission Line
Z0
Z0
(Series) Source Termination (Parallel) Load Termination

Transmission Line

Z0
Parallel-AC Termination

Transmission Line

Z0

Driving multiple gates with load termination


SO WHAT IS CORRECT LAYOUT?

• Remember that every sufficiently long circuit trace is a


transmission line
• Run the line to all inputs, past the last one, and
terminate it with RL=Z0
• Connect each input as close to line as possible to
minimize the capacitance
• Each input adds a parallel impedance, lowers the impedance
below Z0, and creates a mini-reflection
DEPARTURES FROM THE IDEAL

• A transmission line is easy to fabricate and


carries signals with nearly perfect integrity
• But often the line is less-than-perfect…
• Slots in the ground plane, vias, right-angle
bends, added inputs…
• They all look like small capacitances or inductances
CAPACITOR IN LINE

• Any jog or bend or logic input in the line adds a parallel


capacitance
• Transmission direction: Capacitor with 2 Z0’s in parallel
forms an RC lowpass filter with a t r of 2.2(Z0/2)C = 1.1Z0C
• Reflection direction: Lowers Z0 (negative reflection);
imaginary impedance makes reflection first derivative of
edge
• This pulse reflects off of source and can hit load again…
SIMULATION: CAPACITOR IN MID-
LINE WITH SOURCE TERMINATION

Reflection off load hits


capacitor and returns
to load: Falling edge
2nd Reflection:
becomes rising pulse
2nd derivative
INDUCTOR IN LINE

• Any slot or hole in the ground plane adds a series


inductance
• Transmission direction: Inductor with 2 Z0’s in series forms
an RL lowpass filter with a tr of 2.2L/(Z0/2) = 1.1L/Z0
• Reflection direction: Raises Z0 (positive reflection);
imaginary impedance makes reflection first derivative of
edge
• This pulse reflects off of source and can hit load again…
SIMULATION: INDUCTOR IN MID-
LINE WITH LOAD TERMINATION

Reflection off inductor


2nd Reflection:
then reflects off of the
source and hits the load.
2nd derivative
EXAMPLE OF A LAYOUT
NIGHTMARE
• Routed a high-speed bus over the bottom layer of the
board
• Problem: Power plane was hacked up into many smaller
planes so the bus crossed numerous breaks in the plane

• Step 1:Added a ground plane under the high-speed


bus so there was ground continuity
• Under the chip was too crowded to let lines go past
inputs to termination
• Step 2: Moved termination to mid-bus – just before the

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