What is The Best VIA Placement for Decoupling Capacitors?

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  • Опубліковано 9 гру 2020
  • How much better is it to connect decoupling capacitor with a wide track comparing to a narrow track? Is it really a huge difference? What do you think?
    Links:
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    - The picture from video: welldoneblogfedevel.files.wor...
    - PCB Layout & Decoupling Videos: • PCB Layout & Decoupling
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 313

  • @vishnusunderlal5660
    @vishnusunderlal5660 3 роки тому +129

    Hi Robert, It would be interesting to see you testing these PCBs after fabrication

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +13

      Thank you Vishnu

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 2 роки тому +12

      @@RobertFeranec Yes, please. We have almost no good pcb testing videos.

    • @davidjmstewart
      @davidjmstewart Рік тому +1

      Seconded, this would be a really interesting exploration.

  • @nicolasguichard9788
    @nicolasguichard9788 3 роки тому +35

    You demonstrate the effect of the position of the cap by showing one very far compared to one in the center. I would be curious of the result of a cap very near the power pins! Thx for the video, always fun to play the PCB version of Dora the explorer ;)

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +5

      Thank you Nicolas :) PS: I am making a note about this setup.

    • @m.sierra5258
      @m.sierra5258 2 роки тому +1

      @@RobertFeranec Yes, exactly my thought. I wonder how a single capacitor directly at the sink without vias would perform. Which is, to my knowledge, the recommended way of connecting decoupling capacities

  • @iuri.castro
    @iuri.castro 3 роки тому

    Excellent video, Robert! Thank you for taking the time to do all those simulations and organizing it!

  • @harishrao2952
    @harishrao2952 3 роки тому

    Very curious to see the real board with the real time measurements. Your videos are gem, you are really making hardware things very easy to understand. Thanks for all the effort you are putting.

  • @zhitailiu3876
    @zhitailiu3876 3 роки тому +9

    Thank you so much!
    Definitely need to invite Steven and shed some light!

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you Zhitai. PS: Let's see how popular this video will be and how many people will ask for follow up :)

  • @saucebosspl
    @saucebosspl 3 роки тому +8

    I'm a hobbyist (2 layers PCB, audio) and I have been always taught that coupling caps should be on the same layer as the component being decoupled. I belive it makes sense, since vias have parasitic inductance and resistance (also explains why having multiple vias help). Thank you for the videos, they help me a lot!

    • @mik310s
      @mik310s 7 місяців тому

      I put them, on the same layer when possible, I also put a via on the GND pad of the cap.

  • @iPatroni
    @iPatroni 3 роки тому +23

    Great video, would love to see the real world boards tested against the simulations. Thanks

  • @michaelk.1108
    @michaelk.1108 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you, Robert! Great video.
    An answer to one of these every day questions developers come across.
    It really helps a lot to get a better feeling what is good or bad when placing decoupling capacitors.

  • @mohammadhushki96
    @mohammadhushki96 8 місяців тому

    Thanks Robert .. very interesting as always

  • @gregfeneis609
    @gregfeneis609 3 роки тому +1

    Excellent work, Robert! Years ago, some technical articles I read, either from Microchip or Cypress Semiconductor heavily stressed the effectiveness of placing decoupling caps near the power pins and on the same layer as the power pins of microcontrollers. EG in the case of a quad flat package. You can feed the pins their power through vias, but you want the decoupling caps between the vias and the pins. As you say, you can't always have things arranged this nice, but it's something to target when you can. I like your confirmation of surrounding power feed pins with vias improving performance. I had often suspected this would be the case. Thanks again.

  • @bukitoo8302
    @bukitoo8302 3 роки тому +1

    I really much like this kind of videos bringing "the recipes" thar are in books or appnotes to simulations.
    Good job!

  • @sparqqling
    @sparqqling 3 роки тому

    Great video again, you're on a roll with EMC and SI!

  • @jonataubert
    @jonataubert 3 роки тому +4

    As usual this is pure golden :-)
    I would be extremely interested in seeing the practical measurements!
    Thank you so much!

  • @Funkylogic
    @Funkylogic 3 роки тому +3

    Robert,
    Superb post thanks so much for this.
    You push everybody up to a better level.
    I suspect the good result is the input and output inductance to the cap.

  • @rupalm8468
    @rupalm8468 3 роки тому

    This debunks Rick H’s theory about placing vias in certain position. Nice job Robert! Thank you 🙏

  • @randydireen3566
    @randydireen3566 3 роки тому

    Always enjoy your videos after a long day. This is so interesting!

  • @thomasyoon8851
    @thomasyoon8851 3 роки тому +3

    Very interesting! Especially the performance of the thin top layer traces with no vias vs. planes with vias. After some thought I would suggest that the remarkably low impedance is partially due to what the simulation is measuring. Specifically, it appears that the simulation is calculating the impedance from the S21 insertion loss parameter which measures the voltage on the output pair given a varying voltage/current on the input port. For a high speed decoupling capacitor I would think that the S22 (or S11) return loss parameter would be of greater interest which would measure how much the voltage on the output pair changes given a varying output load current. I think that the calculated impedance based on S22 would be much higher for the long skinny top layer trace case.
    Thank you very much for the wonderfully informative video and keep up the great work! I would love to see some PCBs actually built and tested with a network analyzer for both S21 and S11 insertion and return loss measurements.

  • @Leon-xc4vd
    @Leon-xc4vd 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much! And Steve!

  • @mustafaerdogan.apriltechnology
    @mustafaerdogan.apriltechnology 3 роки тому +8

    When people say the location of the capacitor doesn't matter; they are talking about the bulk capacitor(C>100uF) which is more effective at lower frequencies. For decoupling capacitors location matters hugely. Moreover, if you build and measure the real results, I propose a better method for the circuit #43. You used multiple power planes. But if you use power and ground planes interchanging from top to bottom or vice versa ( P-G-P-G) you can create a good interplanar capacitances parallel to each other. This method is said to be much better since the interplanar capacitance has very small ESL compared to chip capacitors.

    • @stevesandler3974
      @stevesandler3974 3 роки тому

      this is true, but this is only partial inductance. You still have to get from the cap vias to these planes and from these planes to the ASIC or other DUT

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +1

      Oh, I believe that people / articles were talking about decoupling capacitors. That is why I was so surprised. Need to find them ... PS: Good idea with the power planes. Thank you.

  • @jfposada007
    @jfposada007 Рік тому

    Thank you. Great video. Yes, please build the PCB. I would love to see the actual vs. simulated results comparison. Great work, Robert. I first found you back in 2012, when I was working with Altium.

  • @22icyo
    @22icyo 3 роки тому +1

    Yes please! Much interesting and I am much curious about the actual impact of the parasitic cap-to-target (basicly direct connection vs via connection) in the real world.
    As always, you have a very good approach to those kind of complex and long debated topics. Keep it up!

  • @famillePuces
    @famillePuces 3 роки тому +1

    Great video! Your channel is a treasure chest for every EE! Almost guess them all right and funny you posted that video I was wondering about that topic!

  • @Christe4N
    @Christe4N 3 роки тому +2

    Hi Robert, this is amazing stuff! Thank you so much! After reading so many application notes, books and following seminars on the topic, it's your videos that make it all come together in a way that is easy to follow, and you can actually *see* what happens. Even when I do indeed understand that it's a specific simulation and results may be different on a real board. Thank you for making the theory practical so that it's easier to apply in real world board design.
    It would seem that the impedance - mostly inductance it seems - between the power connections and the capacitor has the most influence of how much total impedance there is at 100MHz. I see the impedance curves increasing with frequency which also seems to indicate we're looking at inductances having the most influence at those frequencies. All this time I have been thinking about how to connect *capacitors*, and now it begins to show that you may instead have to think about how to minimise *inductances* in the connections.
    I was as surprised as you were at how good the one with the long thin traces and no vias was. It made me wonder about how much inductance a via really has compared to a long thin trace like that. There must be a crossover point somewhere where it's better to use vias or multiple vias than a trace. In any case, I am making a mental note to make sure my power connections are done with *wide* traces wherever I do need to use traces.
    What I really wondered about is this. You placed the single capacitor right in the middle between the source and load pins. What if you placed it right next to the load pins, similar as you would do with an IC's power pins? Would you be willing to consider trying that?
    A second question is how stackup comes into play here. I would assume there is a difference depending on how close the power and ground planes are in the stackup?

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you Christe4N. PS: Exactly the same for me - I also changed the way how I look at connecting decoupling capacitors. We may be doing follow up video with some other examples.

  • @pentachronic
    @pentachronic 3 роки тому +5

    From my understanding, the placement is important from loop-area standpoint but the vias also add a big problem (they're inductive mostly with capacitance to the inner plane holes). It's best to use the same layer from the capacitor to the IC power pins using very short traces (if possible) and then have the via to the power planes. This way you avoid extra inductance and you have the local decoupling with the lowest impedance to the IC (this is why you want capacitors in the first place - for high frequency transient energy).
    For a more realistic simulation you should have an IBIS model of an IC with dynamic switching because the transient behaviour of an IC during switching is a non-linear current draw. The different frequencies will see different impedances due to the different current harmonics.

  • @p_mouse8676
    @p_mouse8676 3 роки тому +6

    What I really like about you and your videos, is that you actually dive a lot deeper into the subject. Most people (even many professionals) just repeat something they have read or heard somewhere without even investigating. (And also say it on such a way like it's factual)
    I would really like to see so practical measurements to see how accurate these simulations are.
    Since vias always add some resistance and inductance, it makes sense that a direct connection will be better I think. I am curious about some hybrid approaches.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you P_Mouse. PS: That is exactly what I have in mind when I am creating my videos - I keep hearing a lot of "facts" and many are exactly opposite, or people just repeat what they heard somewhere and then ... it's super difficult to say what is actually true and how important it really is for real designs. And that is what I am trying to find out in. Just need more ideas for next topics :D

    • @p_mouse8676
      @p_mouse8676 3 роки тому +1

      @@RobertFeranec I have whole lists of these kind of ideas or questions. Although not only related to PCB design.
      But mostly also more from practical design.
      One example is still the excessive amount of via stitching vs proper pcb design.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +1

      @@p_mouse8676 If you would like to share some interesting topics, I can have a look. No promises, but if it is also interesting for me and I find someone who can help, I always try to do it. Just send me an email to info@fedevel.com. Thank you.

  • @Jeremy-fl2xt
    @Jeremy-fl2xt 3 роки тому

    I only recently came across this channel, but the quality is superb! Seeing results on actual boards would be fantastic, but I suggest building a few instances of one of the single cap circuits to get a sense of variation across process.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому

      Thank you Jeremy. I am very happy some people notice how much work it is to create these videos. PS: We are working on real boards now

  • @alexpioner
    @alexpioner 2 роки тому

    Robert, very nice and useful video and very surprising results! If I understand right, the loop inductance plays the main role in degrading the PDN quality. As well VIAs also degrade the loop inductance according to these results (due to their inductance). Placing decoupling capacitor far from the desired point on the board (like VCC & GND of some component) significantly reduces the influence of this capacitor on this desired area. This is the reason why it is mandatory to place as many capacitors (near all power supply pins) as possible. When we place the capacitor between two parallel traces, the travelling wave (noise) is shorted by it, and do not propagate towards the load. When this capacitor is placed far away aside, it shorts the wave propagated towards it, but not the wave propagated towards the load, and can even create travelling wave. This is how I imagine this phenomena. So, according to this video, the best way to place the decoupling capacitor is on two traces between VCC and GND vias and an appropriate componnent's pins. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

  • @BillySugger1965
    @BillySugger1965 Рік тому +4

    Absolutely fascinating, thank you for this! I’m definitely going to look for your other videos on this subject.
    And I second the request for physical measurements to back up the simulation. My guess is the results would not be identical, but the ranking of results (which designs perform better than others) would remain the same.
    I would be _very_ interested to see the load changed to a SMT connector, to simulate (or physically test) the real world case of the load being a SMT device, like a QFP or QFN device. There is debate over the best placement of decoupling capacitors in these situations, and to me your result at 23:40 makes absolute sense; there are _no_ vias between load and decoupling capacitor, and to me that would produce the lowest impedance between the two. For this reason I _always_ place SMT decoupling capacitors as close as possible to, and on the same layer as, the load device.
    What I take away from this is that the two biggest factors are (1) capacitor placement as close as possible to the load, and (2) avoiding vias between capacitor and load. Then, if you _must_ via between the two, (3) maximise the number of vias in parallel, (4) maximise the number of capacitors in parallel, and (5) maximise the number of ground and power planes in parallel. Lastly, it is worth maximising trace width and minimising trace length, but after the above steps these make only marginal improvement.

  • @oliverthane2868
    @oliverthane2868 3 роки тому +1

    Yes please build these 👍 ... I'm also interested to test having the decoupling Cap before the load vs after the load 🙏

  • @EDGARDOUX1701
    @EDGARDOUX1701 3 роки тому

    Excellent topic Robert, I would like to see the board builded and see it work in the real world. Thank you!

  • @VilinxCoding
    @VilinxCoding 3 роки тому

    You are the best Robert❤

  • @CarlSchattke
    @CarlSchattke 3 роки тому

    The parasitic capacitance on the example in the upper right is less since the the air is a much lower dielectric constant. Much less inductance to overcome. Results in a much lower ESR. We always use thin trace for sense lines for this reason. Good topic Robert, very well presented.

  • @ChrisFredriksson
    @ChrisFredriksson 3 роки тому +4

    Awesome yet again! I would love to see a video where you make the board and test it out in real life. Thanks for sharing these results!

  • @LesRoutesdelElectron
    @LesRoutesdelElectron 2 роки тому

    Thank you, Robert, for this very very interesting video.

  • @aavilap
    @aavilap Рік тому

    Fantastic video, very informative!

  • @neeeraaajsharma
    @neeeraaajsharma 3 роки тому +2

    Great Video again !!!
    Thanks you for comparison in details ... yes I agree if we test the results with actual boards

  • @barnabygarrood9862
    @barnabygarrood9862 3 роки тому

    Definitely agree it would be interesting to compare physical measurements to simulation. Really interesting video. Thank you!

  • @petersage5157
    @petersage5157 2 роки тому

    Very illuminating video!
    25:20 I keep going back to the hydraulic analogy, because it works.Which will give you more immediate access to your local water reservoir: a long narrow tube or a short wide pipe? Of course you're going to have less impedance if the power traces are on the same layer as the capacitor; there's always going to be some additional impedance through a via, like resistance through a straw. In fact, if you plan your stackup right, you can even exploit the impedance of a via from a power plane as part of an RC decoupling filter. It's not rocket surgery, it's PCB materials engineering.

  • @sigmaxi7822
    @sigmaxi7822 3 роки тому +38

    To me the simulation results without vias look totally fine. To my knowledge, vias have non-negligible inductance which increases the impedance at high frequencies a lot. So a direct connection is always better than vias.

    • @user-ww2lc1yo9c
      @user-ww2lc1yo9c 10 місяців тому

      how does via inductance over frequency differ from track inductance over frequency?

  • @_santi_calvo
    @_santi_calvo 3 роки тому

    Hi Robert, great video! Really interesting. It will be amazing if you measure this!
    It make sense that not using vias yield to lower impedance, because they introduce a inductance that will increase the impedance with a increase in frequency. That is why is better to use multiple vias in parallel, because you reduce the inductance (series) between the capacitor and the plane.
    Greetings from Argentina!

  • @hansibull
    @hansibull 3 роки тому

    Thank you for creating this video! This is a super useful reference for everyone that's designing PCB, especially since trace width component size and placement is difficult to understand what effects it might have on a circuit. It would be even more interesting if you built this board and did some actual measurements on it! I will definitely watch this video again the next time I'm creating a PCB, just to freshen up the memory!

  • @_ATHONOR
    @_ATHONOR 2 роки тому

    Great Video - an EMC seminar once told me to run power trace across the capacitor, directly to your pin of the IC you are decoupling (Same side). So this adds up with what you have said here. Would be great to see this boards in action.

  • @MaxQ10001
    @MaxQ10001 Рік тому

    Same layer connection should win every time. Extremely small inductance in series with the capacitor compared with vias in series with the capacitor. Luckily the simulations confirmed what I guessed in that regard. Very nice job making this video 😊👍

  • @robertpeters9438
    @robertpeters9438 Місяць тому

    Excellent work!

  • @manglz
    @manglz 3 роки тому

    very useful video, always wondered how the via placement on decoupling capacitors could affect its effectiveness. not very surprised for the better result on the direct connection (no vias) as I see vias as 90degree turns on a track. i hope you build these boards for real and test them, i think more surprises would come. thanks for sharing!

  • @DS-vu5yo
    @DS-vu5yo Рік тому

    Very cool video.
    Your last simulations are correct for the behavior of the capacitor impedance. But the split plain on the top side of the board is still a dipole. If you make it in physical boards, probe it with a near field probe to see the difference between full ground plain and split ground and power plains. I’m guessing you will measure impedance through the cap is amazing- but you still radiate with the modes of the plains.
    I definitely learn something from these videos. Keep up the amazing work! Thank you.

  • @happyhippr
    @happyhippr 3 роки тому

    thanks for sharing this

  • @abdulsalam-ww8si
    @abdulsalam-ww8si 3 роки тому

    I really like you man, you explain really well, thanks for your efforts to make the videos, and being funny along the way

  • @PnPModular
    @PnPModular 3 роки тому

    Brilliant video thanks so much

  • @va-josefranciscomontoya866
    @va-josefranciscomontoya866 2 роки тому

    Hi Robert! Your video is highly informative, get to see which layout has the lowest impedance. A bit of warning for vias planting near the pads, as this would leak the solder into them, thus weakening the solder joint on the cap leads. With a weak solder joint, weak connection, bad impedance. Thank you and keep sharing!

  • @djadostyle
    @djadostyle 3 роки тому

    Thanks again @Robert,
    It would be interesting to see the result for 1 capacitor close to the sink pin. As we usually do in our design. Comparison between narrow and wide traces...
    Good idea for real board testing and comparison to simulation.
    You rock!

  • @ireshjayawaradana5158
    @ireshjayawaradana5158 3 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing

  • @jlysiak
    @jlysiak 3 роки тому +1

    I love your scientific approach to electronics. Awesome content! Definitely, I think it's worth doing checks of the real boards. Simulations, are just simulations :) Waiting for the next video!

  • @Helena-gp8bn
    @Helena-gp8bn 3 роки тому

    Thanks for the interesting work! I'm waiting for measurements on the pcb )

  • @CarstenGroen
    @CarstenGroen 3 роки тому +1

    Very good and interesting video Robert! Great work!

  • @kmacriver
    @kmacriver 3 роки тому

    Robert that was a great video.

  • @gudimetlakowshik3617
    @gudimetlakowshik3617 3 роки тому

    Awesome one....I usually have fights and arguments with my peers on the same topic. I loved the way how simply you have explained how to analyze PDN impedance curves at 5:42....Thanks robert...looking for more high speed pcb design videos...!!

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому

      Thank you very much Gudimetla

    • @gudimetlakowshik3617
      @gudimetlakowshik3617 3 роки тому

      @@RobertFeranec Hi robert, here's an video idea. Recently I started doing some RF boards for wearable devices. The entire design was alright but things started taking bad turns when coming to the RF section. The very big problem I had is to do impedance matching. I also heard this is a very big problem with lot of my hobbyist friends and makers out there as this process would need equipment like VNA's. So can you please shed some light on this topic by making a video on how to use VNA to match the impedances?( by taking a simple 50ohms boards would be enough.)
      Hope you would consider the request. Would love to see a video about this on your channel.

  • @neutron7
    @neutron7 2 роки тому +1

    This is very good, thank you! It would be interesting to see the result when there are vias by the capacitors, and then they are connected with traces to the power pins but not the supply. That seems likely to happen in a board layout.

  • @MattHollands
    @MattHollands 3 роки тому

    You should also make a poster showing all the different options from worst to best! Would be a great reference during layout to know how you might move the capacitors to optimise the PDN.

  • @TINOxiiip
    @TINOxiiip 3 роки тому

    Great video, I am definitely saving the picture

  • @gharbisalem1254
    @gharbisalem1254 3 роки тому +1

    Great content as usual,this Channel is the bible of PCB Design 🙂.

  • @rogerfurer2273
    @rogerfurer2273 3 роки тому

    Thank you Robert. I am surprised by how much difference the addition of traces makes. I would definitely like to see tests of physical boards.

  • @erdling2454
    @erdling2454 3 роки тому

    Hi Robert,
    I really appreciate your investigation on that topic. It made me think a lot and the following question arised: How would simulation change, if you would only connect the capacitor's power and/or ground pad directly to the IC's pads and not to the source pads. I think this case would represent a very typical design approach.
    In practice, many of the "good "solutions presented in your video can't be implemented, since board area is limited. If you like to spend more time on that topic, it would be interesting to take a look on more simple/practical designs. What I mean by "simple/practical" design is:
    - Place one or two capacitors of different sizes (e.g. 1u + 0.1u) really close to the IC's power pad (capacitor and IC on same board side)
    - Connect the power pad of the capacitor directly to the IC's power pad with a wide trace
    - Connect the power and ground pad of the capacitor to power and ground plane by via, respectively
    Then you could go ahead and simulate following effects on PDN impedance:
    - Number of vias connecting capacitor(s) to planes
    - Position of vias relative to power/gnd pad (above, side, both)
    - Via diameter / via pad size
    - Capacitor orientation relative to IC edge
    - Capacitor's power pad connected directly to IC vs.capacitor's power and ground pad connected directly to IC
    I think this investigation is very helpful for many board designs and maybe it would be worth a short video.

  • @edgaraskorsakas5703
    @edgaraskorsakas5703 2 роки тому

    I had experienced your finding about cap on the same layer the hard way - EMC testing. It is all about loop area and inductance. After putting power inductors and power caps on the same side of the board, design passed EMC. With caps on the bottom we as engineers get sloppy, we forget that energy is stored in the dialectic between planes and cap plates. So if we changing plane (which we do, image current flow direction), we increase impedance a lot. I use that for filtering when I need to. If we keep decoupling cap on the same layer, we get current flow from the cap (directly between +V and GND pins of IC) on top layer, then this current is supplemented by current flow from inductive power pins. If we do not use direct connection to cap, then current flow from power plane to IC pin (through inductive vias), so voltage drop and ground bounce occur and only then additional charge comes from the cap (through inductive vias).

  • @michaeljones5205
    @michaeljones5205 3 роки тому

    Thanks for the comprehensive overview. Yes, please fabricate. I'm always skeptical of simulations - we'll see if it's warranted. Very valuable information as always!

  • @Hirnlappen
    @Hirnlappen 3 роки тому

    Yes yes yes! Want to see the real world test 😊

  • @sebastianauerwoger2892
    @sebastianauerwoger2892 3 роки тому +1

    Hi Robert,
    great video. Keep up the good work. I would also appreciate to see you actually build up this board and verify your simulations. That might shake up some "common PCB rules".
    BTW: I always recommend your AD videos to people who are new the software. Way more efficient, than learning it by the AD manual. So, thanks for that too.

  • @sebastiandeleon2109
    @sebastiandeleon2109 3 роки тому

    this is gold

  • @Niels_Dn
    @Niels_Dn 3 роки тому

    Very helpful! Thanks!

  • @user-eg3lh5kn7j
    @user-eg3lh5kn7j 3 роки тому +1

    Robert, thank you a lot!

  • @francescem94
    @francescem94 3 роки тому +5

    It was good to demystify the "vias on the side are better than vias on top of the pad". Very little difference indeed.
    In my opinion, the interesting layout would be having the capacitor on the same side as its load connection, but the input supply coming through vias from the power planes. This is a very common implementation in DC/DC power supplies. Check the typical symmetrical CIN decoupling implementation suggested in most power devices from MPS or TI, it has minimal impedance and the EMI emitted gets canceled out by the opposite direction of the fields.

  • @PETATNISSEN
    @PETATNISSEN 3 роки тому +2

    This is stuff for the nerds... and I love it :) Please make a board for testing. Would be really interesting to see real life measurements.

  • @foxabilo
    @foxabilo 3 роки тому

    This matches what most chip manufacturers say about decoupling caps "They must be as close to the power pins of the chip as possible" taken quite litterally this means on the same layer and right next to the pins. This matches your results perfectly.

  • @jebinsatheeshkumar5884
    @jebinsatheeshkumar5884 3 роки тому

    Hi Robert,
    Indepth explanation. Awaiting for the real time result, I curious about know simulation tools are how close to reality!.
    Jebin

  • @kalhana1
    @kalhana1 3 роки тому +1

    I always go for via in pad (with filled and capped vias) for anything that is high speed to minimise the impedance. This saves board space as well.

  • @timun4493
    @timun4493 3 роки тому

    You seem to be in an especially good mood in this video, very pleasing to watch, thank you. I would certainly be very interested in seeing your simulation results verified by measurement, also would you consider having a look at specialty multi terminal packages like smt feedthru, x2y and lga/bga, this would be useful as most of the material available is from entities trying to sell these things

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому

      Thank you tim. It was an interesting video even for me and I was happy to see the results :)

  • @siddharthmali5841
    @siddharthmali5841 3 роки тому +1

    Great video as usual.

  • @666aron
    @666aron 3 роки тому

    Thank you for another great explanation. These videos are invaluable. I don't know if I will ever have the chance to design something > 5MHz, but even in that domain, the conclusions are useful.

  • @naren445
    @naren445 2 роки тому

    Hi Robert,
    I am eager and curious to see the video of Testing of PCBs after assembly.
    Thank you.

  • @robertdixon8238
    @robertdixon8238 3 роки тому

    Another great video in the decoupling series. As I understand it, local decoupling (10n - 100n) needs to be at the pins, but bulk decoupling (1uF and above) just needs to be connected on the planes. It would be good to add these to your test PCB, also. It is not clear from your excellent plots how the frequency of the ESR notch is affected by the different connection types. Does this matter?
    Another test would be what effect does putting the decoupling capacitor AFTER the output pins have, compared to having it BEFORE the output pins? Your test PCB from part 1 has the local decoupling after the CPU power pins, but the common advice is to make the PDN track go to the capacitor and then to the device power pins. Does this really matter?
    Keep up the great work. Look forward to further involvement from Steve, Eric, and Rick!
    Please build and test the PCB. Theory is important, but real measurements confirm the simulator's predictions.
    P.S. I think there is more to learn about the ferrite beads from part 3.

  • @Jerzy-wedrowiec
    @Jerzy-wedrowiec Рік тому

    Hi Robert.
    It would be interesting to compare with the installation of one low-ESL capacitor. It should be significantly better than a single conventional one at high frequencies. By shortening the track lengths and increasing the number of holes, we reduce the external inductance and hit the internal inductance limit. We can further reduce the inductance only by paralleling conventional capacitors. According to the characteristics of the capacitors, we should get the same characteristics for one low-ESL capacitor and four normal capacitors. All connected with minimum external inductance.
    Congratulations again on the youtube button:)

    • @Jerzy-wedrowiec
      @Jerzy-wedrowiec Рік тому

      It would also be more interesting to compare standard situations with a single capacitor and using two polygons (power and ground as in the first examples) versus a ground polygon and powering the track (in the same layer as the power polygon), via a capacitor.

  • @ismailovali6368
    @ismailovali6368 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much Robert, I like you very much :)

  • @hassanjaved1147
    @hassanjaved1147 3 роки тому

    Hi Robert! I am curious about the results when they are analyzed after Fabrication. Thanks for such detailed video :)

  • @TrombonePlayAlongs
    @TrombonePlayAlongs 3 роки тому +1

    Great Video!
    If possible, I always try to place the decoupling capacitors on the same side of the IC and draw a direct connection (and not separate vias for capacitor and power pin).
    In my understanding, I have two reasons:
    The direct connection creates a low inductive path. That also applies for your example with a the thin, but straight direct connection. With separate vias, the current from and to the capacitor has a more odd path to follow, which results in losses for higher frequencies and impairs the decoupling effect.
    The second reason is: You want to have the decoupling capacitor as the reference, not the decoupled plane around the IC. There might be still some current peaks crossing that take effect. This applies for forward and return current, so to say Power and Ground. That is why I also try to put the vias behind the decoupling capacitor, not between capacitor and IC.

    • @stevesandler3974
      @stevesandler3974 3 роки тому

      this may not be a good idea. Watch for another via. The question is always the sum of the partial inductance terms. If there is a large separation between planes (say 2 layer or 4 layer PCB with symmetrical thicknesses) then the inductance of a surface trace is very high. If the two capacitor vias can be very close together, field cancellation will greatly reduce the inductance. This is in many of my lectures and bootcamps.

    • @goatarse
      @goatarse 3 роки тому

      You are doing exactly the right thing. Keeping the noise out of the plane.

  • @MaxWattage
    @MaxWattage 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks Robert, fantastic work.
    In terms of additional simulations to try, I would be interested to know whether it was adding more capacitors that gave you better results, or whether it was simply that by adding additional capacitors that caused some to located closer to the load terminals (on the right hand side of the board), rather than being located in the middle of the board.
    Regarding using big areas of copper on the top-surface, whilst soldering the caps to big areas of copper (as in #25) gives a nice low-impedance, I suspect that the lack of thermal reliefs will cause production reliability problems during IR-reflow soldering. They would also be a nightmare for re-work, as you would have to heat up the whole copper-plane just to de-solder the capacitor. So, this might cause more trouble than it is worth.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +1

      Thank you Nicholas PS: Today, I was thinking exactly the same - if just placing some of the capacitors closer made the difference. Maybe another example to try ....

  • @giannisasp1208
    @giannisasp1208 3 роки тому +1

    Hi Robert! Very interesting video as always!
    If I had to justify why direct connection is better, I would say that it probably has better results because it is the shortest connection (so less inductance) and also there is no via (so shorter connection and no via parasitic inductance). Preferably use the variation with the thicker tracks or polygons.
    As for the Capacitor size, I think it would make a bigger difference if we had to compare smd with through hole packages as mr.Bogatin mentioned in one of your previous videos, but maybe 0402 with 0603 for example would have little difference here at least for relatively low frequencies. Maybe it would be more noticeable for higher frequencies?
    Manufacturing and measuring the real pcbs would be interesting I think.

  • @yomamsie4438
    @yomamsie4438 3 роки тому +4

    I cant wait for the altium pdn tool to include ac analysis

  • @efox29
    @efox29 3 роки тому +10

    Around 15:00 you mentioned that you had heard that decoupling cap position may not matter if you have power plane and that your sim shows that it may not be true. I would say that your power planes are really far apart and therefore ineffective. Looks like your planes are +40mils apart. If you can, run the sim again, but this time, for the stackup, keep the power planes < 8 mils. Does placement of capacitors matter then ? From literature, its that the power plane provide most of the decoupling (when < 8mils) and physical decouple caps can be much looser.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 роки тому +3

      I could try this. When I was talking to Steve, he also pointed this out.

  • @MattHollands
    @MattHollands 3 роки тому

    Please build the boards! This is fascinating

  • @ranganatennakoon
    @ranganatennakoon 3 роки тому

    perfect !

  • @sigfreed11
    @sigfreed11 3 роки тому

    @Robert Feranec, I’m not sure what the width of your board is, but the decoupling impedance is directly impacted by the length of the trace (including bias). So in the example of the one cap with direct connect on the top layer from PWR Supply to PWR Pin, if that total distance is less than the distance through the vias (not sure of your board thickness either, I didn’t bother converting from mm to mil), it would make perfect sense as to why you have a lower impedance.
    I would have loved to see an explanation and show the correlation between your decoupling caps and the decoupling formulas. Making the math come alive would be really beneficial for us all

  • @wojtekgomboc
    @wojtekgomboc 2 роки тому

    it would be very interesting to see this test, at least for few situation (worst, best and middle)

  • @pppjunk
    @pppjunk 3 роки тому +1

    That was interesting! If I understood correctly, you set the input on the left and the output on the right, so this uses capacitors as filters, not decoupling... If you set the input and output port on the same side of the pcb, it is more like the way a chip sees the impedance of the PDN at its power pin, I think you'd get different results. This would be interesting to simulate.

  • @stefanocapra9857
    @stefanocapra9857 3 роки тому

    Great, great video. Ok: it is important to put more vias not only on the capacitor but also on the "output" pin, but does it make sense to put more vias also on the "input" power pin? At those frequencies where the decoupling capacitor works the contribute from the input pin should be negligible... What do you think? Thanks again.

  • @frankgoenninger6958
    @frankgoenninger6958 3 роки тому

    Hi Robert, yeah - I, too, would be very interested in the measurements... And also HOW you measure these... Thx!

  • @happyIMB
    @happyIMB 3 роки тому +1

    Hi Robert, great video as always! I really enjoyed following along and predicting results, albeit not always correct :) It means I've learned something. I would really like to see you follow up with testing these in real life, I was also a bit surprised with the the one with long thing connection, I would not be if the pins were not effectively vias on their own, as all supplied power would need to pass through the decoupling capacitor. I've always been thought to consider connecting in a way that power needs to pass through the decoupling cap before connecting to a pin, with PTH it's harder ton achieve that, but on SMD like you mention it is much better to have decoupling cap on same layer as the pin connecting to it.
    I wonder, if having sink PTH pins isolated from the power plane, forcing all of the power to pass through decoupling cap before reaching the sink pin, would yield better results?

  • @MattNeighbour
    @MattNeighbour 3 роки тому

    Great video. I always had an instinct that vias on decoupling capacitors are bad, I try to put them close to power pins with ground on a polygon using multiple stitching vias.
    It would be very interesting to compare simulations (or reality!) of say a QFN vs a BGA, where the QFN has a close decoupling cap connection on the top layer and the BGA needs vias. We generally think that BGA packages are best for high speed but maybe for the PDN impedance the QFN is better?

  • @samc4499
    @samc4499 2 роки тому

    I cannot recall where I heard this from. Someone told me that the efficiency of decoupling is all about the loop inductance (from the cap itself to the power pin). A via is an inductor as well as small traces and long distance. So a good decoupling is to minimize all 3, if you have space!

  • @Jajaho2
    @Jajaho2 3 роки тому

    Please do make the board. This video was very interesting and hands on.

  • @mahoneytechnologies657
    @mahoneytechnologies657 2 роки тому

    Yes Build Board and Test, In the words of the Late Jim Williams, the final CAD is Copper Clad CAD!