Design007 Magazine

Design007-Dec2019

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20 DESIGN007 MAGAZINE I DECEMBER 2019 • The distributed system model is more accurate but also more complex than the lumped element model • Traces longer than one-tenth wavelength will usually need to be analyzed as a distributed system • The technology employed and the physi- cal scale of the design is also significant as miniaturized circuits can use the lumped model at a higher frequency • Lumped element designs generally result in a smaller product • The distributed model for transmission lines starts deviating from the simplified lumped element model between a trace length of 0.01 and 0.1 of the wavelength of the signal Further Reading • B. Olney, "Beyond Design: Controlled Im- pedance Design," The PCB Design Maga- zine, May 2015. • B. Olney, "Beyond Design: Transmission Lines—From Barbed Wire to High-speed Interconnects," The PCB Design Magazine, May 2014. • B. Olney, "Beyond Design: Effects of Sur- face Roughness on High-speed PCBs," The PCB Design Magazine, February 2015. • B. Olney, "Beyond Design: Common Symptoms of Common-mode Radiation," Design007 Magazine, May 2018. • Arthur Anderson, "Transmission Lines: From Lumped Element to Distributed Element Regimes," All About Circuits, November 28, 2015. • E. Bogatin, Signal and Power Integrity: Simplified, Prentice Hall, 2008. Editor's note: All figures drawn by Barry Olney. Barry Olney is managing director of In-Circuit Design Pty Ltd. (iCD), Australia, a PCB design service bureau that specializes in board- level simulation. The company developed the iCD Design Integ- rity software incorporating the iCD Stackup, PDN, and CPW Planner. The software can be downloaded www.icd.com.au. To read past columns or contact Olney, click here.

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