Printed circuit boards (PCBs) or other circuit substrates are often constructed of multiple layers, with connections from the surface of the substrate being connected to inner layer traces of the substrate. For signal integrity, the impedance of the signal path from one point to another should be a constant as possible. With transitions between layers in a substrate, there is a high probability of impedance mismatch between a signal path through a first layer, the transition to a second layer and the signal path through the second layer. This causes overall impedance mismatch in the signal path from end to end, resulting in degraded signal integrity at the receiving end.
Embodiments of the invention may be best understood by reading the disclosure with reference to the drawings, wherein:
The circuit substrate 10 has a top surface 11, which may include traces. An example of a trace is shown at 12. The circuit substrate has layers 16, 17 and 18, shown here as a dielectric. In this example, layer 16 is a single layer on the left side of the diagram and divided into two sublayers 16a and 16b on the right side. On the left side, the layer 16 may actually be formed of two different dielectric materials, one on the top of the strip line 14 and the other below, but on the left side, they form one layer of dielectric between conductive layers. The strip line 14 is connected to the trace 12 by a via 20 that has been back drilled or stub drilled to minimize the stub effect of the via, discussed in more detail later.
It must be noted that the transition shown here is from a microstrip through a plated via to an internal stripline. Application of the invention is not restricted to this occurrence. The transition could be from a microstrip or other surface trace to another microstrip or surface trace coplanar waveguides. Alternatively, the transition could be from a stripline in one layer to a stripline in another layer completely internal to the circuit substrate. For ease of discussion, here, however, the transition will be from a surface microstrip to an internal stripline, with the understanding that the via 20 may traverse a dielectric layer to form a connection between two metal layers.
The metal stub of the signal via 20 may be formed from a metal-plated via through the substrate 10. Currently, metal stubs such as 20 are typically formed as a metal-plated via through the substrate which may then be optionally back-drilled to minimize the stub beyond the stripline trace, from the bottom of the substrate in the orientation shown in
The signal path via 20 is electrically connected to the microstrip 12 and the strip line 14, allowing signals traveling through the microstrip 12 to transition into the layers of the circuit board and into strip line 14. The signal via 20 may transition through the layers having apertures such as 28. These transitions, as well as the differences between the microstrip 12, the signal path via 20 and the strip line 14, may result in mismatches or irregularities in the signal path characteristics.
Signal path characteristics as used here means measurable qualities of an electrical signal in the path. These include but are not limited to impedance, including components of impedance of inductance, capacitance, resistance, and conductance; return loss; insertion loss; cross talk; and attenuation.
In situations where impedance mismatch arises, there is a disturbance in the electromagnetic (EM) field around a signal path. This can affect the signal strength, causing loss in the signal. In more extreme cases, for example, a signal that has a voltage level associated with a logic level ‘1’ may experience enough loss that when it reaches the other end of the signal path is has a voltage level associated with a logic level ‘0.’
Return loss is generally affected by the location of the ground plane relative to the signal path due to reflections associated with the mismatch of impedance between signal vias and references vias. As can be seen in
In addition to the placement of the reference vias, annular rings used in the manufacturing process may be controlled for the signal characteristics as well. An example of such a ring at a surface of a substrate is shown at 26 in
In future embodiments, it may be possible and desirable to eliminate the annular ring, in which case the connection would be directly to the metal lining the via, without the annular ring. For example, if via size and drill size were small enough, the via may be drilled such that the circumference of the via is contained within the trace, with no need for an annular ring.
It is possible to optimize the formation of the annular ring 26, the placement of the reference vias 22 and the aperture 28 to eliminate or mitigate mismatches and irregularities in the signal path characteristics. As mentioned above, currently substrate manufactures are concentrating on the annular ring and optimizing the formation of that to minimize impedance in the outer layer. The formation of the annular ring in this example, as well as any other apertures in any other layers, may be tuned to a particular electrical characteristic, such as impedance, of the signal path in that layer.
A method of designing a signal path to manage a selected signal characteristic is shown in
In
The number of reference vias may be guided by the size of the area provided for the vias, the application and geometry of the signal vias, the circuit requirements, etc. The placement of the reference vias relative to the signal via and each other may be used to control the desired signal characteristics as will be discussed further.
In 34, the via size is selected based upon the determinations made in 30. If a drill is used to form the via, the drill size is selected based upon the geometry of the via. It must be noted that in current implementations, other means may be used to make the hole such as by laser drilling and are considered to be included in this discussion. Therefore, the drill size selection is considered to be an optional process.
In 36, an aperture, sometimes referred to as an anti-pad, is set. Referring back to
In 42, the aperture on each layer may be dealt with differently depending upon the signal via, reference vias, dielectric thickness and characteristic above and below the trace, the stub, the annular ring, etc.
For the embodiment under discussion here, once the aperture is set at 36, the process moves to controlling the trace topology. In one embodiment, the trace is treated as a co-planar waveguide for modeling purposes. A co-planar waveguide is a trace topology that has two reference traces on either side of the signal trace, separated by a gap, typically air on the same plane.
Using a co-planar waveguide model, it is possible to determine the layout of the surface topology. Referring to
As can be seen in
During the process of adjusting the trace topology at 38 of
Once the trace topology is set based upon the co-planar waveguide, there may be further adjustments due to the presence of the annular ring, if one is used, at 40. Typically, in current manufacturing processes, the presence of an annular ring ensures that the plating of the via is complete with no disconnects. However, in future implementations, it may be possible to drill into the via with a drill small enough that the trace itself will form the connection to the via, without use of an annular ring. Therefore, the process of adjusting for the annular ring may be optional.
Having discussed application of the embodiments of the invention for a substrate having one layer of dielectric between two metal layers, it is possible to discuss a multi-layer substrate in which there are interlayers. A cross-section of such a substrate is shown in
In
Layer 2 (L2) is a reference layer, connecting to the reference via 52, but not to the signal via 50. Layer 3 (L3) is the signal layer connecting to the signal via 50. For purposes of discussion here, the reference layer 2 will be referred to as being above the signal layer. Similarly, layer 4 (L4), which is another reference layer, will be referred to as being below the signal layer. In this particular embodiment, layer 5 (L5) is the layer on the opposite surface of the substrate from the incoming signal trace.
In the interlayers, layers 2-4, the apertures of the reference layer relative to the signal via are to be set and controlled similar to the surface aperture referred to previously. The apertures may differ in each layer, however, because the effective dielectric constant is different due to the air dielectric at the surface. The aperture 82, for example, of the reference layer 2, is controlled and adjusted to maintain the desired signal characteristic. The apertures 74 and 76 may be of different sizes, due to the dielectric constant of the material used, or the thickness of the dielectric, as examples.
In the embodiment of
In this manner, the signal transition portions of the substrate are tuned and controlled so as to make the transitions have a particular target characteristic. For example, if the target characteristic is an impedance for the entire signal path of 50 ohms, the signal transitions from stripline to the various levels of the signal via to the other stripline are tuned and controlled such that the entire signal path has an impedance of 50 ohms. This may sometimes be referred to as an electrically ‘invisible via’ as any testing done shows no impedance variations at the via.
Thus, although there has been described to this point a particular embodiment for a method and apparatus for manufacture of a circuit substrate, it is not intended that such specific references be considered as limitations upon the scope of this invention except in-so-far as set forth in the following claims.
This application is a continuation of, and claims priority to, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/701,138, filed Jul. 20, 2005, and is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60701138 | Jul 2005 | US |