A substrate typically provides physical support, signal routing and other functions to an electrical system mounted thereon. A substrate may comprise a motherboard carrying discrete electrical components, integrated circuits (ICs), and the like, or an IC package supporting an IC die. Conventional substrates often include several layers of conductive planes to carry electrical reference (e.g., Power and Ground) signals.
Via 40 may provide mechanical support for mounting conductive interface 60 to substrate 1, as well as a means to connect conductive interface 60 to a conductive trace residing in another layer of substrate 1. However, a stub portion of via 40 may present an undesirable capacitive load into a signal path that includes trace 50, thereby deteriorating the performance thereof.
Substrate 100 includes base dielectric layer 110. Layer 110 may be composed of any suitable material, including but not limited to bismalemide triazine (BT) and FR4 in some embodiments. Dielectric planes 111, 112 and 113 may be composed of dielectric material and/or other material such as BT or FR4.
Conductive planes 120, 121 and 122 separate layer 110 and dielectric planes 111, 112 and 113 from one another. Conductive planes 120 and 122 may comprise reference planes for supplying reference voltages to electrical components that are connected to substrate 100. Conductive plane 121 comprises a routing layer including conductive traces for carrying electrical signals. The aforementioned electrical components may be connected to one of planes 120, 121 or 122 by conductive vias that pass through one or more planes of substrate 100.
Conductive planes 120, 121 and 122 define respective non-conductive antipad” areas 123, 124 and 125 through which via 130 may pass so as not to electrically connect via 130 to any of conductive planes 120, 121 and 122. Rather, an end of conductive via 130 is connected to conductive pad 140, which is in turn connected to conductive trace 150. The portion of conductive via 130 that passes from layer 113 through layer 110 may be referred to as a “stub”. Conductive pad 140 may be suited to receive an electrical connector of an electronic component.
Conductive plane 120 also defines non-conductive area 126 extending from antipad area 123 in a first direction. Conductive trace 150 extends from conductive pad 140 in the first direction as well. Such an arrangement may result in an inductive section of trace 150 that compensates for excess capacitance of via 130.
Trace 150A is connected to conductive pad 140A and extends in a first direction therefrom. Conductive planes 120A and 120B include respective non-conductive areas 126A and 126B that extend in the first direction from non-conductive antipad areas 123A and 123B. Such an arrangement may increase the inductance of trace 150A in comparison to an apparatus that lacks either or both of non-conductive areas 126A and 126B. The inductance may compensate for the capacitance of stub portions of via 130A.
As shown, portion 155 of trace 150 extends from pad 140 in a first direction and non-conductive area 126 of plane 120 extends from antipad area 126 in the first direction. Moreover, portion 155 is disposed above non-conductive area 126. The illustrated embodiment further shows that portion 155 is narrower than other portions of trace 150 that are disposed above conductive areas of plane 120.
In some embodiments, via 130 may be connected to a conductive reference plane and/or a conductive trace internal to substrate 100. Accordingly, substrate 100 may include one or more layers of conductive traces for carrying electrical signals. In this regard, any conductive element described herein may comprise copper or any other suitable conductive material.
Initially, at 201, a conductive plane is fabricated. The fabricated conductive plane defines a non-conductive anti-pad area and a second non-conductive area extending from the antipad area in a first direction. The conductive plane may be fabricated on any suitable base using any suitable system.
Conductive layer 120 may be fabricated on plane 112 using currently- or hereafter- known techniques including but not limited to sputtering, electroplating, and chemical vapor deposition. Photolithography techniques may be used to define area 123 and 126. In some examples thereof, photoresist is selectively applied to areas 123 and 126 on dielectric plane 112 using any suitable process such as masking, exposure, and stripping. A conductor is then deposited on the resulting structure, and the photoresist is removed. The photoresist may comprise dry film, liquid, or other photoresist and may be deposited using any currently- or hereafter-known techniques.
A dielectric plane is fabricated upon the conductive plane at 202. The dielectric plane may be laminated, spray coated, or fabricated using other techniques. The dielectric plane may comprise any suitable dielectric material, including a polymer material. Again, any currently- or hereafter-known system to fabricate a dielectric plane may be employed at 202.
Next, at 203, a conductive via is fabricated through the dielectric plane of 202 and the non-conductive antipad area of 201. In some examples, the conductive via is fabricated using conventional photolithography and/or by drilling a hole and plating an interior surface of the hole with conductive material.
Such a conductive trace is fabricated at 205 upon the dielectric plane fabricated at 202 and is connected to the conductive pad fabricated at 204. Moreover, the conductive trace extends from the conductive pad in the first direction described above with respect to 201.
According to some embodiments of process 200, the conductive trace fabricated at 205 includes a first portion disposed above a portion of the second non-conductive area of the conductive plane. Additionally, as illustrated in
In particular, portion 355 of trace 350 extends from pad 340 in a first direction and non-conductive area 326 of conductive plane 320 also extends from antipad area 326 in the first direction. Portion 355 is disposed above non-conductive area 326, and is narrower than other portions of trace 350 that are disposed above conductive areas of plane 320. In some implementations, portion 355 may exhibit a greater inductance than portion 155 of
Motherboard 430 may electrically connect memory 420 to substrate 100. More particularly, motherboard 430 may comprise a memory bus (not shown) that is electrically connected to electrical contacts 440 and to memory 420. Memory 420 may comprise any type of memory for storing data, such as a Single Data Rate Random Access Memory, a Double Data Rate Random Access Memory, or a Programmable Read Only Memory.
The several embodiments described herein are solely for the purpose of illustration. The various features described herein need not all be used together, and any one or more of those features may be incorporated in a single embodiment. Some embodiments may include any currently or hereafter-known versions of the elements described herein. Therefore, persons skilled in the art will recognize from this description that other embodiments may be practiced with various modifications and alterations.