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PCBD-Dec2017

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58 The PCB Design Magazine • December 2017 Energy in the form of electromagnetic waves is transferred through the dielectric materials, of the multilayer PCB substrate, through vibra- tions of electric and magnetic fields. A transmis- sion line does not carry the digital signal itself but rather, guides electromagnetic energy from one point to another. Signals travel at the same speed, given the same medium. However, the microstrip (outer layer) traces are embedded in a mélange of dielectric material, solder mask (if required) and air. This lowers the effective di- electric constant and increases the propagation speed compared to that of stripline (inner layer) traces. This month, I will look at the disparity in signal propagation in multilayer PCBs. When we watch waves rolling onto the shore, we tend to think that the water is mov- ing towards us, but that's not actually the case. The individual particles that make up the waves move up and down perpendicularly to the di- rection of the wave. But they do not move sig- nificantly themselves until they break, and hit the shore, which disperses the energy. The par- ticles take part in the wave by bumping into one another and transferring energy. The waves travel as a transverse wave which is character- ized by particle motion that is perpendicular to the wave energy. Surfers hang out well offshore, sitting on their boards behind the break, patiently watch- ing the horizon for the next set and the magic wave. As the wave (swell) passes, they bob up and down vertically. The waves come in sets because the amplitude of the waves is modu- lated by another longer wave. The first wave in a group is small, the next one is bigger and so on until the largest wave appears in the middle of the group. Then they get smaller again. Way back in my surfing days, we used to say that the third wave was always the biggest, but others say it is the seventh; it is all relative to the num- ber of waves in the set. If you have ever experienced a "wave" at a football stadium (Figure 1), you will be amazed at the actual speed at which the wave travels. It takes less than 60 seconds for the wave to complete a circuit of a typi- cal stadium but nobody moves (apart from standing up/down). Here the medium, in which the wave propagates, is people. If the perimeter of the outer edge of the stadium is 1km, then the wave propagates at ~60km/hr— and nobody has to wear a safety belt. Many stadiums have a mem- bers-only section, to which are admitted only an elite group of persons whose apathy appears by Barry Olney IN-CIRCUIT DESIGN PTY LTD / AUSTRALIA Signal Flight Time Variance in Multilayer PCBs BEYOND DESIGN Figure 1: Propagation of a wave around a stadium. Source: Science Learning Hub.

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