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08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 1 Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Example of a Printed Circuit Board –

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Presentation on theme: "08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 1 Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Example of a Printed Circuit Board –"— Presentation transcript:

1 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 1 Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Example of a Printed Circuit Board – front and back side The course material was developed in INSIGTH II, a project sponsored by the Leonardo da Vinci program of the European Union

2 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 2 PCB Design, Introduction For new electronic products, designers are key persons, but should work in intimate cooperation with: –Sales, marketing and customers –Subcontractors –Production process experts –Cost engineers –Logistics and purchasing staff –etc.

3 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 3 PCB Design, continued Advanced PCB CAD tools a neccessity –Schematics –Component Library –Critical Parameters (Placement Constraints, Electromagnetic Compatibility, Thermal Limitations, etc) –Automatic Routing –Final Touch Manual Routing –(Verification by Final Simulation and Back Annotation)

4 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 4 PCB CAD tools, continued Output: –Final Schematics –Assembly Drawings –Documentation for PWB Manufacturer (”Gerber” file giving input for making PWB Manucturing Data (See Chapter 5): Data for Photo- or Laser Plotter for Making Photographic Films and Printing Masks Data for Numeric Drilling and Milling Machines Data for Placement Machines Data for Test Fixtures and Testing Machines

5 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 5 PCB Design, continued Guidelines for Right Quality –Choice of Best Suited Technology/Technologies –Choice of Components: Right Compromise between Performance, Reliability, Cost, etc. –Design for Production –Design for Testability –Design for Repair

6 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 6 PCB Design, continued Guidelines on Design for Manufacture –Few layers –Coarse pattern –Standardisation –Robust design (coarse tolerances) –Orderly placement Fig. 6.1.a: Proper component placement for hole- and surface mounted components

7 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 7 Orderly Placement, continued Fig. 6.1.b: Proper component placement for hole- and surface mounted IC components

8 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 8 PCB Design, continued Important Guideline for "Robust Design": –Circuits should function with large parameter tolerances: Design windows allowing for variations in component parameters. Process windows allowing for variations in each process step. –Regulatory requirements on safety and EMC should be passed within the specified design and process windows.

9 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 9 Design of Hole and Surface Mounted PCBs: Design Parameters Minimum Dimensions: –The conductor cross section areas and resistivity of the material determine maximum current capacity and thereby minimum dimensions. –Current capacity is limited by excessive heating of the conductors and the PCB. –Maximum allowed ohmic voltage drop along the conductor also determines minimum dimensions.

10 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 10 Design Parameters: Minimum Dimensions Fig. 6.2: Current capacity and temperature increase in conductors on PCBs. The upper figure shows the temperature increase (labels on each curve) at different combinations of cross-sections and currents). The lower figure shows the conductor cross-section (along the x-axis) as a function of the conductor width for different Cu-layer thicknesses.

11 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 11 Design Parameters: DC Line Resistance: DC Line resistance: R =  L/(t b)  2.0 10 -8  m for Cu foil –  is resistivity of the conductor material (ohm m) –L is conductor length –t is conductor thickness –b is conductor width Sheet Resistance [ohm/square]: –R sq =  / t –R = R sq L / b –18 um copper: R sq ~ 1 m  sq –35 um copper: R sq ~ 0.5 m  /sq L b t Current I R = R L b R =  t

12 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 12 Hole and Surface Mounted PCB Design Pattern Minimum Dimensions: Table 6.1:Examples of minimum dimension and PCB classes. The class indicates how many conductors can pass between the solder pads of a DIP package (no. of channels), and typical corresponding minimum dimensions in mm. When two figures are given for hole diameters, they are for component- and via holes respectively.

13 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 13 Pattern Minimum Dimensions, continued Fig. 6.4: a): Parameters in layout dimensions used in Table 6.1. b): Minimum dimensions for solder mask for surface mount PWBs. Left: Dimensions for screen printed solder mask, with one common opening for all solder lands of an IC package. Right: Photoprocessible solder mask with a "pocket" for each terminal, permitting conductors between the solder lands. b) a)

14 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 14 Mixed Hole Mount and SMD Printed Circuit Boards Mixed PCBs are quite common due to: –Technical issues –Component availability and cost –Available capacity and performance of equipment in PCB manufacturing line(s). Fig. 6.5: Common types of SMD- and mixed SMD-/hole mount PCBs.

15 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 15 SMD Printed Circuit Boards Important aspects of design: –Component heat tolerances for reflow- /wave solder processes –Component orientation for wave solder: Shadowing –Solder thieves for wave soldering –Minimum distance between components –Isolated via holes/solder lands Fig. 6.6: Preferred and not preferred directions of SMD components during wave soldering.

16 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 16 Important Aspects of Design, continued Fig. 6.7: Minimum separation between SMD components during wave soldering.

17 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 17 Important Aspects of Design, continued Fig. 6.8: Solder lands for SMD components should be separated from heavy copper areas by narrow constrictions. Conductors should preferably leave the solder lands of one component symmetrically.

18 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 18 Important Aspects of Design, continued Fig. 6.9: Via holes should be separated from solder lands.

19 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 19 Important Aspects of Design, continued Fig. 6.10: Dummy land for better control of the amount of adhesive in wave soldering process.

20 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 20 Important Aspects of Design, continued Fig. 6.11: "Solder thieves" are areas in the Cu layer to reduce bridging in wave soldering.

21 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 21 Important Aspects of Design, continued Fig. 6.12: Parameters defining solder land dimensions for SMD resistors and capacitors, please refer to Table 6.2.

22 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 22 Solder Land Dimensions Table 6.2: Solder land dimensions for SMD resistors and capacitors (mm), please refer to Figure 6.12.

23 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 23 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Fig. 6.13: Additional dimensions of SMD component and solder lands. Width a: a = W max + K Length b:* Reflow :b = H max + 2T max + K * Wave:b = H max + 2T max + 2K Length B:B = L max + 2H max + 2T max + K, K = 0.25 mm.

24 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 24 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Fig. 6.14: Solder land dimensions for SMD transistors and diodes.

25 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 25 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Table 6.3: Solder land dimensions for SO or VSO components (mm), please refer to Figure 6.15. Fig. 6.15: Solder land dimensions for SO and VSO packages, please refer to Table 6.3.

26 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 26 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Fig. 6.16: Solder land dimensions for PLCC, LLCC and flatpacks, please refer to Tables 6.4 - 6.7. a = B max + 0.1 mm B = width of leas b = F max + 0.4 mm F = length of lead footprint A,B = E max + 0.8 mmE = separation between lead ends

27 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 27 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Table 6.4: Solder land dimensions for PLCC (mm), please refer to Figure 6.16. Pitch, P = 1.27 (0.050") a = 0.63b = 2.0 Table 6.5: Solder land dimensions for LLCC (mm), please refer to Figure 6.16. Pitch, P = 1.27 (0.050") a = 0.63b = 2.5

28 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 28 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Table 6.6: Solder land dimensions for flatpacks (mm), please refer to Figure 6.16. b = 2.5

29 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 29 Solder Land Dimensions, continued Fig. 6.17: Solder land dimensions for TAB.

30 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 30 Design for Testability Fig. 6.18: a): Correct position of test point, separated from solder land. b): Test points on solder lands are not recommended. c): Testing on components or component leads should be avoided.

31 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 31 Design for Testability, continued Fig. 6.19: Examples of test point placement on a grid with 0.1” spacing, for testing of SMD components with 0.05” pitch.

32 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 32 Testability Defect level: DL (ppm) = 1 - Y (1-T) x 10 6 DL = defect level Y = yield T = fault coverage Test Methods –Functional test –In-circuit test –Scan path –Boundary scan –Built-in self test

33 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 33 Test Principles Guidelines for Test Strategy –Single sided (normally) - double sided test fixtures are expensive and less robust –Separate test points - avoid using component leads or solder lands –0.1" grid (normally) - 0.05 ” test probes are fragile –Solder on test points for reliable contact –Watch out and consider possible problems with high components

34 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 34 Material Considerations for Thermal Compatibility Fig. 6.20: Mechanical strain is caused by difference in coefficient of thermal expansion (TCE), and changes in temperature. The magnitude of the corresponding stress depends on dimensions, temperature difference/change, and the elastic moduli of the materials.

35 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 35 Thermal Design Fig. 6.21: a): Heat flow from hole mounted and surface mounted components on a PCB. b): Relative amount of heat removed by conduction, convection and radiation, from DIP hole mounted components and SMD LLCC components - typical values.

36 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 36 Thermal Design Fourier´s law –Q =  T/R T –R T = (1/K) (L/A) Q = Heat flow [W]  T = Temperature difference [°C] R T = Thermal resistance [°C/W] K = Thermal conductivity [W/m°C] L,A = Length / cross-section Equivalent to Ohm´s law : –I =  U/R el R el = 1/  L/A Convection: Q = h A  T –h = convection coefficient [W/m o C] Fig. 6.22: a): Heat flow due to conduction - Fourier´s equation. b): Heat flow due to convection.

37 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 37 Thermal Design, continued Thermal Resistance –R jc : Thermal resistance junction - case –R jl : Thermal resistance junction - lead –R ja : Thermal resistance junction - ambient T j = T a + P R ja –T a : Ambient temperature –T j : Junction temperature Fig. 6.23: Thermal model of an IC and package.

38 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 38 Thermal Design, continued Example: IBM’s Thermal Module for Mainframe Logics

39 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 39 Thermal Design, continued Table 6.8: Typical thermal resistances for various package types [ o C/W]

40 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 40 Thermal Design, continued Table 6.9: Typical values for the effective thermal conductivity of different types of PCBs.

41 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 41 Thermal Design, continued Effective Thermal Conductivity in PCBs –K eff =  (k i t i ) / t tot k i = thermal conductivity layer i t i = thickness layer i t tot = total thickness

42 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 42 Thermal Design, continued Design of Right Thermal Coefficient of Expansion (TCE) –  =  (  i E i t i ) /  ( E i t i ) t i = thickness of layer i  i = TCE material in layer i E i = Elastic modulus of layer i Table 6.10:Material parameters for calculating TCE and effective thermal conductivity of metal core boards. gp-Untis 2003/0 VÅR 2004 - Termin 3 og 4 HØGSKOLEN I VESTFOLD 09.01.04 09.25 2 MT2 2.år Bachelor Mikroteknologi MandagTirsdagOnsdagTorsdagFredag 1 8.20 - 9.05 ERA MAT56 B0233 F 5.1-5.3 ERA MAT56 B056 F 5.1-5.3 2 9.15 - 10.00 3 10.10 - 10.55 NVV MIKMT50 B142 F 5.1-14.5 PO MAFMT50 C026 EMH MAFMT50 F 5.1-14.5 4 11.05 - 11.50 5 12.00 - 12.45 TV MAFMT50 B018 PO MAFMT50 B002 L 5.1-14.5 EMH MAFMT50 A006 PO MAFMT50 A006 TOB MAFMT50 C226 L 5.1-14.5 6 12.55 - 13.40 PO MAFMT50 EMH MAFMT50 B142 F 5.1-14.5 7 13.50 - 14.35 NVV MIKMT50 C226 NVV MIKMT50 C234 L 5.1-14.5 8 14.45 - 15.30 ERA MAT56 B056 BR MAT56 A006 BR MAT56 C126 Ø 5.1-5.3 9 15.40 - 16.25 10 16.35 - 17.20 11 17.25 - 18.10 12 18.15 - 19.00 13 19.10 - 19.55 :::::::::DET TAS FORBEHOLD OM ENDRINGER

43 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 43 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.24: Cross section and thicknesses for a practical PWB with two Cu/Invar/Cu cores. The thicknesses were designed to get an over-all TCE of 7.5 [ppm/°C m] The achieved value was measured to be 9.3 [ppm/°C m] Calculated effective thermal conductivity in the x - y directions was 21 [W/ °C m]

44 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 44 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.25: a): Pin-grid package with cooling fins. b): Measured thermal resistance in the component with forced air cooling.

45 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 45 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.26: LLCC package with thermal solder lands and thermal vias connected to a metal core in the PCB.

46 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 46 Thermal Design, continued Improved Cooling –Thermal vias –Cooling fins –Fan –Thermally conducting gas: helium, fluorocarbon –Liquid: water, fluorocarbon, oil –Boiling liquid –Heat pipe –Impingement cooling –Microbellows –Microgrooves

47 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 47 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.27: a): Forced air convection in a channel between two PCBs (Texas Instruments) b): water-cooled heat exchanger for edge cooling of PCBs and temperature distribution (qualitative).

48 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 48 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.28: Heat convection coefficient in different cooling media for natural convection, forced convection and boiling

49 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 49 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.29: "Microbellows cooling": A jet of water or other cooling liquid impinges on the backside of the chip. The bellow structure is necessary to accommodate thermal expansion

50 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 50 Thermal Design, continued Fig. 6.30: Cooling by forcing liquid through microscopic, etched channels in the semiconductor chip [6.32]. The channels are approximately 400 µm deep and 100 µm wide.

51 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 51 Thermal Simulation Fig. 6.31: Bar diagram for calculated temperatures on each component chip by the thermal simulation program TMOD.

52 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 52 High Frequency Design When needed? –t r < 2.5 t f –t r = 10 - 90 % rise time –t f = l/v t r is 10-90% rise time t f is time-of-flight-delay over the length l of critical conductor paths of the circuit v is propagation speed: v = c/  r –c speed of light –  r effective relative dielectric constant

53 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 53 High Frequency Design Fig. 6.32: Distributed parameters in a model of a loss free transmission line. C and L are capacitance and inductance per m length.

54 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 54 High Frequency Design Fig. 6.33: The analogous lossy line contains a conductor series resistance R and dielectric loss conductance G, both per m length.

55 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 55 High Frequency Design Table 6.11:Signal propagation speed in different media. v = c 0 /(  r ) = 30 (cm/ns)/  r

56 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 56 High Frequency Design, cont Characteristic Impedance –V = Z o · I Z o characteristic impedance : – Z o = ((R + j  L)/(G + j  C)) 1/2 –  = angular frequency –R = resistance per unit length –L = inductance per unit length –C = capacitance per unit length –G = loss conductance per unit length In loss free medium: – Z o =  (L/C ) Reflection coefficient: –R = (Z 1 - Z 2 ) / (Z 1 + Z 2 ) Z 1 and Z 2 : characteristic impedances of media 1 and 2

57 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 57 High Frequency Design, continued Fig. 6.34: Distorted signal as a function of time when the transmitter has 78 ohms impedance and the receiver has different impedances as indicated. If the receiver also has 78 ohms impedance the signal at the receiver is a time delayed replica of the transmitted signal.

58 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 58 High Frequency Design, continued Fig. 6.35: Geometries for obtaining a controlled characteristic impedance.

59 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 59 High Frequency Design, continued Fig. 6.36: Expressions for characteristic impedance, Z o, signal propagation speed, T PD, capacitance per unit length, C o, and crosstalk, X Talk, in different geometries: a) coaxial, b) microstrip c) stripline. The expression for coaxial geometry is exact, the others are approximate and valid only in certain parameter ranges.

60 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 60 High Frequency Design, continued Fig. 6.37: Dependence of the characteristic impedance on geometric dimensions, for: a) Stripline b) Microstrip. w is the signal conductor width, S is the distance between ground planes for stripline, and H the distance between signal conductor and ground plane for microstrip (please refer to Figure 6.35). Curves are shown for different signal conductor thicknesses, t. a b

61 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 61 High Frequency Design, continued Fig. 6.38: Cross talk: A signal from A to C is transmitted to the B - D line and gives noise in B (backward or near end cross talk) and in D (forward or far end cross talk).

62 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 62 High Frequency Design, continued Fig. 6.39: Backward cross talk as a function of conductor separation in stripline geometry in different dielectrics. The effect increases with increasing  r and decreases with increasing conductor separation.

63 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 63 Attenuation V b = V a exp(-  l) –  Attenuation coefficient  = (  r,  s ) +  d –  r dominates at low frequencies –  s at high frequencies (GHz) –  r = R / (2Z o ) –  s = (  r  o f  ) 1/2 / (w Z o ) for skin depth  s = (  /  f  r  o ) 1/2 << t –  d = [  o  1/2 f tan  ]/ c R = ohmic resistance per unit length  = electrical DC resistivity in the conductor t = conductor thickness tan  = dielectric loss tangent w =conductor width f = frequency  =  r  o = magnetic permeability

64 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 64 Attenuation, continued Fig. 6.40: High frequency skin depth for copper, and conductor resistance due to skin effect, relative to the DC resistance. The resistance has increased by approx. a factor 2 when the skin depth  is one half of the conductor thickness t.

65 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 65 Attenuation, continued Fig. 6.41: Conductor- and dielectric losses as functions of frequency for multilayer thin film modules.

66 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 66 Design of Flexible Printed Circuits Fig. 6.42: Bending of double layer flexible print with different conductor layout. The Figure shows the number of cycles before failure with 5, 10 and 20 mm bending radius and 180° angel of bending. (Data: Schoeller Elektronik). If the copper layer in the bending zone is strained 16 % or more it is likely to fail during the first cycle.

67 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 67 Design of Flexible Printed Circuits, continued Fig. 6.43: a): Solder lands on flexible prints should be rounded in order to reduce the possibility for failures, b): The contour of the board should be rounded in order to reduce possibilities for tearing (dimensions in inches). The "rabbit ears" on the ends of the metal foil is for obtaining better adhesion to the polyimide. c): Plastic rivets should be used to avoid sharp bends in the interface between the flexible and the rigid parts of the PCB. a) b) c)

68 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 68 Design of Membrane Switch Panels Fig. 6.44: Detail of a membrane switch panel. The tail with interconnections to the panel is protected with a laminated foil. Light emitting diodes may be attached with conductive adhesive. Screen printed polymer thick film series resistors may be used.

69 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 69 Design of Membrane Switch Panels Fig. 6.45: Contact areas of membrane switch panel with back lighting and window. Examples of lighted text on a dark background and the opposite combination. If a metal dome is used the information has to be next to the key and not underneath it.

70 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 70 System Level Modelling Fig. 6.46: The SUSPENS model for the different levels in an electronic system. The symbols are parameters characterising the system and different technologies of the system. They are quantified and used to compare or optimise different possible versions of the system in computer calculations.

71 08.10.99Electronic Pack….. Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Slide 71 End of Chapter 6: Printed Circuit Board Design Important issues: –When designing PCBs: Working with the right people including marketing and production people Working with the best tools –Use good Design Guidelines and do not violate Design Parameters Robust design to allow for process variations –Use solder land dimension templates Design for test Specific design methods for applications with specific requirements –High speed, high power etc. Questions and discussions?


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