This invention relates to a printed wiring board and a method of supplying power and forming wiring for the printed wiring board.
The increasing sophistication (higher-speed operation, higher density) of LSIs accelerates the lowering of a power supply voltage, thus making it more difficult to suppress a voltage drop in feed wiring on a printed board.
For example, VLSIs whose power supply voltage is 1 V and power consumption is 40 to 50 W have been put into the market in recent years. In this case, a power supply current is 40 to 50 A. Supposing that the application range of 1 V is ±5%, a permissible voltage drop is 50 mV or less. At present, however, it is difficult to establish a design method for realizing this goal.
Examples of the related art of feed wiring are Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication (JP-A) Nos. Hei 10-270862 and 2005-183790. Both the technologies are aimed at suppressing electromagnetic interference (EMI) by inserting a slit in the vicinity of an LSI to separate a high frequency component. In the technologies, however, feed wiring from an on-board power source to the LSI is not considered, and hence there is a problem in that it is ineffective in suppressing a DC voltage drop.
It is an object of this invention to provide a technology for solving the above-mentioned problem inherent to the conventional technologies, and to provide a printed wiring board and a method of forming feed wiring in a printed wiring board, which are capable of reducing a DC voltage drop at the time of power feeding.
According to this invention, there is provided a printed wiring board, comprising:
a power source;
at least one LSI;
a planar power supply wiring for supplying power from the power source to the LSI;
gaps formed in the planar power supply wiring; and
a plurality of partial wiring patterns each forming a current path from the power source to the LSI, the partial wiring patterns being formed via the gaps formed in the planar power supply wiring.
Further, according to this invention, there is provided a method of supplying power and forming wiring for a printed wiring hoard, the printed wiring hoard including a power source, at least one LSI, and a planar power supply wiring for supplying the power from the power source to the LSI,
the method comprising:
forming gaps in the planar power supply wiring; and
forming a plurality of partial wiring patterns each forming a current path from the power source to the at least one LSI.
According to this invention, the DC voltage drop at the time of power feeding from the power source of the printed wiring board to the LSI can be reduced.
(Configuration in the Related Art)
At first, the related art is described with reference to
As illustrated in
In recent years, semiconductor devices such as LSIs have become lower in voltage and higher in density for high-speed operation. In recent years, the power supply voltage has reduced from 5 V or 3.3 V to 1.0 V or 0.9 V. On the contrary, the processing ability of LSIs has improved to lead to the growth of the scale of LSIs, and the power supply current is now increasing. In addition, the range of a power supply voltage to be fed to the LSI is expressed as a percentage of the power supply voltage, and is typically about +5%. This value does not change even at a low voltage.
In other words, a permissible voltage drop in feed line is within 250 mV at a power supply voltage of 5 V and within 50 mV at a power supply voltage of 1 V, that is, the absolute value of the permissible range has significantly reduced, thereby increasing the difficulty in design.
Under such circumstances, in the configuration of the printed wiring board 10 illustrated in
This invention solves the above-mentioned problem in the related art.
Specifically, this invention has the features that, in power supply wiring (planar wiring) for feeding power from a power source (on-hoard power source, DC-DC converter, regulator, etc.) to an LSI in an electronic circuit board, a gap is inserted for every LSI, every power supply terminal of the LSI, or every terminal block so as to separate the planar wiring, to thereby improve the resistance characteristics inherent to the planar wiring so as to feed power to the LSI efficiently.
Next, embodiments of this invention are described in detail with reference to the drawings.
(First Embodiment)
Referring to
As illustrated in
In the first embodiment of this invention, the gaps 24 are formed in the power supply wiring 23, to thereby provide a plurality of partial wiring patterns 25 each forming a current path from the power source 21 toward the LSI 22.
Specifically, in the case of power feeding from a single power source 21 to the plurality of LSIs 22, the gaps 24 are formed among the LSIs 22 to employ the star wiring structure as viewed from the power source 21.
Now,
As illustrated in
In this case, the power source 21 is, for example, an on-board power source, a DC-DC converter, a regulator, or the like.
Next, referring to
In general, it is said that “widening a power supply plane” as illustrated in
R=ρ×L/(W×T) (1)
where W represents the conductor width, T represents the conductor thickness, L represents the conductor length, and ρ represents the resistivity. As an example,
However, Expression (1) is satisfied when a uniform current flows through the conductor cross-section. The relationship is not satisfied in the case of power feeding in an electronic circuit (printed wiring board 10) as illustrated in
The reason is described with reference to
A current flowing between the feeding point 60 and the load point 61 first flows through the shortest route (that is, the straight line connecting the two points). When the current flows only through the shortest route, a voltage drop occurs with respect to its vicinity, and hence a current starts to flow in a path slightly outside the shortest route so as to compensate for the voltage drop.
Similarly, another current flows in order to compensate for a potential difference with respect to the outside of the path. As a whole, a current density 70 (see the arrows of
This phenomenon occurs instantly after input of power supply. Although the current distribution cannot be observed actually, the current distribution can be calculated from the equivalent circuit of
Based on the phenomenon,
It can be found from
If following Expression (1), the wiring resistance is supposed to be ½ times when the wiring width is doubled, but it is not true. This is because, as described above, Expression (1) is the relational expression which is satisfied when the current densities are distributed in the cross-section uniformly.
According to the first embodiment of this invention, the feed regions can be separated for each LSI 22 so that the current densities may be uniform, and hence the DC voltage drop can be suppressed. In particular, by forming the star wiring whose center is the power source 21 (see
(Second Embodiment)
Next, referring to
As illustrated in
This configuration increases power consumption of the LSI 92, resulting in the problem of a voltage drop similarly to the above. Specifically, in the configuration of the printed wiring board 90 illustrated in
The second embodiment of this invention solves the problem in the related art.
Referring to
As illustrated in
In the second embodiment of this invention, the plurality of gaps 140 in a linear shape are formed in the power supply wiring 130, to thereby provide the reed-shaped partial wiring patterns 150 each forming a current path from the power source 110 toward the LSI 120.
As described above, in the case of power feeding from a single power source 110 to a single LSI 120, the reed-shaped partial wiring patterns 150 are formed between the power source 110 and the LSI 120 in order to obtain proper feed wiring. The plurality of reed-shaped feed wirings can obtain a uniform current density of the individual reed-shaped partial wiring patterns 150, with the result that the voltage drop is suppressed.
In this case, the power source 120 is, for example, an on-board power source, a DC-DC converter, a regulator, or the like.
A printed wiring board 100 illustrated in
With this configuration, the current can be distributed efficiently to the power supply wiring 130 separated into the reed shape (reed-shaped partial wiring patterns 150).
The embodiments of this invention have been described in detail above, but this invention is not limited to the above-mentioned embodiments, and various modifications can be made thereto based on the technical gist of this invention.
This application is based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-210462 filed on Sep. 21, 2010, and hence contents disclosed in the above-mentioned patent application are all incorporated in this application.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2010-210462 | Sep 2010 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2011/070096 | 8/30/2011 | WO | 00 | 3/8/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2012/039269 | 3/29/2012 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20070144770 | Nakao | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20080257592 | Harrer et al. | Oct 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
20-270862 | Oct 1998 | JP |
2001-85805 | Mar 2001 | JP |
2005-183790 | Jul 2005 | JP |
Entry |
---|
Texas Instruments, PCB Design Guidelines for Reduced EMI, Nov. 1999, Document SZZA009, p. 7. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130170155 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |