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This reference for experienced designers presents advanced techniques for high-speed signal propagation. More specialized than its companion volume, High Speed Digital Design (by the same authors), this text covers issues relevant to transmission at the upper limits of speed and distance. Topics include printed circuit traces, differential signaling, inter-cabinet connections, clock distribution, and simulation. The text is based upon material taken from courses taught by Johnson at Oxford University and other sites. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
...one of the finest efforts to come along in the field of applied high-speed digital design because of its focus on providing tools for the whole design team bringing a high-speed product to life. For all the PCB designers and circuit designers out there, buy it; read it; keep it.
More Reviews and RecommendationsDR. HOWARD JOHNSON has accumulated 30years of experience in digital design, consulting withengineers all over the world. He is the featuredSignal Integrity columnist for EDN Magazine andChief Technical Editor of IEEE—02.3 standards for FastEthernet and Gigabit Ethernet. He frequently conductstechnical workshops for digital engineers at OxfordUniversity and other sites worldwide: www.sigcon.com.
DR. MARTIN GRAHAM is Professor Emeritus ofElectrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at theUniversity of California at Berkeley. He specializes inteaching the design of reliable and manufacturableelectronic systems.
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May 21, 2003: One word to other designers about this book ?Essential?. It may well be the `Rosetta Stone? to understanding high-speed design concepts. It's filled with real-world remedies for dealing with high-speed signal problems, and it will be required reading for my entire design team.
The Barnes & Noble Review
Heads up to digital designers who want to excel -- this book is for you! After years of working in the field, Howard Johnson and Martin Graham convey their extensive knowledge in a straightforward way and have packed their work full of practical insights gained from experience. This is the reference that will keep you up-to-speed in the fast-moving world of digital design.
Each chapter in this book treats a specialized topic having to do with high-speed signal propagation. The authors have written the chapters in such a way that they may be studied in any order. For instance, Chapters 1 and 2 present the underlying physical theory of various transmission-line parameters, including the skin effect, proximity effect, dielectric loss, and surface roughness. Next, Chapter 3 develops a generated frequency-response model common to all conductive media. Chapter 4 outlines the calculation of time-domain waveforms from frequency-domain transfer functions. And, Chapters 5 through 11 discuss specific transmission media, including single-ended printed circuit board (PCB) traces, differential media, general building wiring standards, unshielded twisted-pair wiring, shielded twisted-pair wiring, coaxial cables, and fiber. Chapter 12 addresses miscellaneous issues concerning clock distribution. Finally, Chapter 13 explores the limitations of Spice and I/O Buffer Information Specification (IBIS) simulation methods.
Filled with information and enlivened with experience, this outstanding manual is just right for keeping your skills up-to-date in the rapidly growing field of digital design. A must. John Vacca
John Vacca, the former computer security official (CSO) for NASA's space station program (Freedom), has written 38 books about advanced storage, computer security, and aerospace technology.
In High-Speed Signal Propagation, Howard Johnson brings together state-of-the-art techniques for building digital interconnections that can transmit faster, farther, and more efficiently than ever before. Packed with new examples and never-before-published high-speed design guidance, this book offers a complete and unified theory of signal propagation for all metallic media, from cables to pcb traces to chips.
COVERAGE INCLUDES:
Dr. Howard Johnson has accumulated 30 years of experience in digital design, consulting with engineers, all over the world. He is the featured Signal Integrity columnist for EDN Magazine and Chief Technical Editor of IEEE 802.3 standards for Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet. He frequently conducts technical workshops for digital engineers at Oxford University and other sites worldwide: www.sigcon.com.
Dr. Martin Graham is Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California at Berkeley. He specializes in teaching the design of reliable and manufacturable electronic systems
...one of the finest efforts to come along in the field of applied high-speed digital design because of its focus on providing tools for the whole design team bringing a high-speed product to life. For all the PCB designers and circuit designers out there, buy it; read it; keep it.
Loading...GLOSSARY OF SYMBOLS
1 FUNDAMENTALS
1.1 Impedance of Linear, Time-Invariant, Lumped-Element Circuits
1.2 Power Ratios
1.3 Rules of Scaling
1.4 The Concept of Resonance
1.5 Extra for Experts: Maximal Linear System Response to a Digital Input
2 TRANSMISSION LINE
PARAMETERS
2.1 Telegrapher? Equations
2.2 Derivation of Telegrapher? Equations
2.3 Ideal Transmission Line
2.4 DC Resistance
2.5 DC Conductance
2.6 Skin Effect
2.7 Skin-Effect Inductance
2.8 Modeling Internal Impedance
2.9 Concentric-Ring Skin-Effect Mode
2.10 Proximity Effect
2.11 Surface Roughness
2.12 Dielectric Effects
2.13 Impedance in Series with the Return Path
2.14 Slow-Wave Mode On-Chip
3 PERFORMANCE REGIONS
3.1 Signal Propagation Model
3.2 Hierarchy of Regions
3.3 Necessary Mathematics: Input
Impedance and Transfer Function
3.4 Lumped-Element Region
3.5 RC Region
3.6 LC Region (Constant-Loss Region)
3.7 Skin-Effect Region
3.8 Dielectric Loss Region
3.9 Waveguide Dispersion Region
3.10 Summary of Breakpoints Between Regions
3.11 Equivalence Principle for Transmission Media
3.12 Scaling Copper Transmission Media
3.13 Scaling Multimode Fiber-Optic Cables
3.14 Linear Equalization: Long Backplane Trace Example
3.15 Adaptive Equalization: Accelerant Networks Transceiver
4 FREQUENCY-DOMAIN MODELING
4.1 Going Nonlinear
4.2 Approximations to the Fourier Transform
4.3 Discrete Time Mapping
4.4 Other Limitations of the FFT
4.5 Normalizing the Output of an FFT Routine
4.6 Useful Fourier Transform-Pairs
4.7 Effect of Inadequate Sampling Rate
4.8 Implementation of Frequency-Domain Simulation
4.9 Embellishments
4.10 Checking the Output of Your FFT Routine
5 PCB (PRINTED-CIRCUIT BOARD) TRACES
5.1 Pcb Signal Propagation
5.2 Limits to Attainable Distance
5.3 Pcb Noise and Interference
5.4 Pcb Connectors
5.5 Modeling Vias
5.6 The Future of On-Chip Interconnections
6 DIFFERENTIAL SIGNALING
6.1 Single-Ended Circuits
6.2 Two-Wire Circuits
6.3 Differential Signaling
6.4 Differential and Common-Mode
Voltages and Currents
6.5 Differential and Common-Mode Velocity
6.6 Common-Mode Balance
6.7 Common-Mode Range
6.8 Differential to Common-Mode Conversion
6.9 Differential Impedance
6.10 Pcb Configurations
6.11 Pcb Applications
6.12 Intercabinet Applications
6.13 LVDS Signaling
7 GENERIC BUILDING-CABLING STANDARDS
7.1 Generic Cabling Architecture
7.2 SNR Budgeting
7.3 Glossary of Cabling Terms
7.4 Preferred Cable Combinations
7.5 FAQ: Building-Cabling Practices
7.6 Crossover Wiring
7.7 Plenum-Rated Cables
7.8 Laying cables in an Uncooled Attic Space
7.9 FAQ: Older Cable Types
8 100-OHM BALANCED TWISTEDPAIR CABLING
8.1 UTP Signal Propagation
8.2 UTP Transmission Example: 10BASE-T
8.3 UTP Noise and Interference
8.4 UTP Connectors
8.5 Issues with Screening
8.6 Category-3 UTP at Elevated Temperature
9 150-OHM STP-A CABLING
9.1 150-. STP-A Signal Propagation
9.2 150-. STP-A Noise and Interference
9.3 150-. STP-A: Skew
9.4 150-. STP-A: Radiation and Safety
9.5 150-. STP-A: Comparison with UTP
9.6 150-. STP-A Connectors
10 COAXIAL CABLING
10.1 Coaxial Signal Propagation
10.2 Coaxial Cable Noise and Interference
10.3 Coaxial Cable Connectors
11 FIBER-OPTIC CABLING
11.1 Making Glass Fiber
11.2 Finished Core Specifications
11.3 Cabling the Fiber
11.4 Wavelengths of Operation
11.5 Multimode Glass Fiber-Optic Cabling
11.6 Single-Mode Fiber-Optic Cabling
12 CLOCK DISTRIBUTION
12.1 Extra Fries, Please
12.2 Arithmetic of Clock Skew
12.3 Clock Repeaters
12.4 Stripline vs. Microstrip Delay
12.5 Importance of Terminating Clock Lines
12.6 Effect of Clock Receiver Thresholds
12.7 Effect of Split Termination
12.8 Intentional Delay Adjustments
12.9 Driving Multiple Loads with Source Termination
12.10 Daisy-Chain Clock Distribution
12.11 The Jitters
12.12 Power Supply Filtering for Clock
Sources, Repeaters, and PLL Circuits
12.13 Intentional Clock Modulation
12.14 Reduced-Voltage Signaling
12.15 Controlling Crosstalk on Clock Lines
12.16 Reducing Emissions
13 TIME-DOMAIN SIMULATION TOOLS AND METHODS
13.1 Ringing in a New Era
13.2 Signal Integrity Simulation Process
13.3 The Underlying Simulation Engine
13.4 IBIS (I/O Buffer Information Specification)
13.5 IBIS: History and Future Direction
13.6 IBIS: Issues with Interpolation
13.7 IBIS: Issues with SSO Noise
13.8 Nature of EMC Work
13.9 Power and Ground Resonance
COLLECTED REFERENCES
POINTS TO REMEMBER
APPENDIX A
Building a Signal Integrity Department
APPENDIX B
Calculation of Loss Slope
APPENDIX C
Two-Port Analysis
APPENDIX D
Accuracy of Pi Model
APPENDIX E
erf( )
INDEX
Welcome, and thank you for your interest in High-Speed Signal Propagation: AdvancedBlack Magic. This is an advanced-level reference text for experienced digital designers whowant to press their designs to the upper limits of speed and distance.If you need to transmit faster and further than ever before, this book is here to help.You'll find it packed with practical advice.
The material in this book has been honed during my many years of work as chieftechnical editor of standards for both Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet—projects which, Ihope, have touched your life in a favorable way. During those and many other projects, themodels and concepts described here have been of invaluable service to me. Now I'd like topass them on to you.
When you are done reading, share your knowledge with those around you as mytechnical mentor, Martin Graham, has done with me. Educate your coworkers. Educate yourmanagement. Above all, continue to educate yourself. If this book inspires you to advanceyour understanding with even one laboratory measurement, then I will know you are on theright track.
I would also like to say it has been a great pleasure teaching and working with manyof you through my classes and lectures. Above all, I appreciate those who take the time toshare with me their thoughts, their concerns, their dreams, and their problems. It alwaysinterests me to hear about real experiences from real engineers.I wish you the best of luck on your next design.
See you on the Internet,
Dr. Howard Johnson
www.sigcon.com
TOPICS COVEREDPrinted circuit traces:Limits to attainable speed and distanceRC and LC modepropagationSkin effect and dielectric loss design charts and equationsProximity effectSurface roughnessNon-TEM mode of propagationStep responseEffect of vias
Differentialsignaling:Edge-coupled and broadside-coupled differential pairsEffect of bendsIntrapair skewDifferential trace geometry impedanceCrosstalkRadiation
Inter-cabinetconnections:Coaxial cablesTwisted-pair cablesFiber opticsEqualizersGeneral building wiring for LAN applications
Clock distribution:Special requirements for clocksClock repeatersMultidrop clock distributionClock jitterPower filtering for clock sources
Simulation:Frequency-domain simulation methodApplicability of Spice and IBIS
HOW THIS BOOK IS ORGANIZEDEach chapter in this book treats a specialized topic having to do with high-speed signalpropagation. They may be studied in any order.
Chapters 1 and 2 present the underlying physical theory of various transmission-lineparameters, including the skin effect, proximity effect, dielectric loss, and surfaceroughness.
Chapter 3 develops a generalized frequency-response model common to all conductivemedia.
Chapter 4 outlines the calculation of time-domain waveforms from frequency-domaintransfer functions.
Chapters 5 through 11 discuss specific transmission media, including single-ended pcbtraces, differential media, general building wiring standards, unshielded twisted-pair wiring,150- shielded twisted-pair wiring, coaxial cables, and fiber.
Chapter 12 addresses miscellaneous issues concerning clock distribution.
Chapter 13 explores the limitations of Spice and IBIS simulation methods.
PREREQUISITESA basic understanding of the frequency domain representation of linear systems is assumed.Readers without the benefit of formal training in analog circuit theory can use and apply theformulas and examples in this book. Readers who have completed a first-year class inintroductory linear circuit theory will comprehend the material at a deeper level.RELATION TO PRIOR BOOKSThis book is a companion to the original book by Johnson and Graham, High-Speed DigitalDesign: A Handbook of Black Magic, Prentice-Hall, 1993. The two books may be usedseparately or together. They cover different material.
The original book deals with a broad spectrum of high-speed phenomena. It builds asolid understanding of ringing, crosstalk, ground bounce, and power supply noise as theyexist on printed circuit boards. It emphasizes basic circuit configurations where these effectsmay be easily understood and learned. It treats supplementary subjects including chippackages, oscilloscope probe, and power systems for high-speed digital products.
This High-Speed Signal Propagation book is more highly specialized, delving intoissues relevant to transmission at the upper limits of speed and distance. If you need totransmit faster and further than ever before, this book shows you how.
High-Speed Digital Design and High-Speed Signal Propagation together comprise agood reference set for persons working with high-speed digital technology.
Those of you familiar with my other books will recognize similarities in style.Notably, I've tried to impart, as best I can, the same sense of realism born of longexperience.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSLiterally thousands of people have taken the time to communicate with me about high-speedissues, either through email or in person at my seminars. These conversations have inspiredme to investigate and collect together the material in this book. To all of you, I owe a debt ofgratitude.
The following people contributed specific comments or questions that are discussed inthe text (in alphabetical order): Sal Aguinaga, James C. Bach, Eric V. Berger, RaymondBullington, Doug Butler, Tim Canales, Bruce Carsten, Code Cubitt, Dave Cuthbert, BillDaskalakis, Martin Graham, Paul Greene, Gary Griffin, Bob Haller, John Lehew, John Lin,Raymond P. Meixner, Craig Miller, Mitch Morey, Dan Nitzan, Bhavesh Patel, Dipak Patel,Jim Rautio, Ravi, Boris Shusterman, Kevin Slattery, Bob Stroupe, Bill Stutz (twice), andFabrizio Zanella. Thanks to all of you for many hours of good correspondence.
I especially thank those who volunteered for the difficult task of reviewing the text.This group of intrepid individuals spotted numerous errors and suggested many new topicsfor exploration. They deserve a large measure of credit for helping make this a more usefultext (in alphabetical order): Jacob Ben Ary at Aquanet, Greg Dermer at Easystreet, SteveEms at Lecroy, Alexandre Guterman at Nortel, Valery Kugel at Juniper, Professor WillMoore at Oxford University, Jose Moreira at Agilent, Gopa Parameswaran at Cisco, BobRoss at Mentor Graphics, Bert Simonovich at Nortel, Palani Subbiah at Cypress, and GeoffThompson at Nortel.
My editors at Prentice-Hall, Bernard Goodwin, Nicholas Radhuber, and Carol J.Lallier, have contributed their professional expertise (and patience) during the long processrequired to complete this project.
Without my dutiful and highly accurate assistant Jennifer Epps this book would nothave been possible.
All the articles adapted for publication in this book are reprinted with permission fromEDN magazine, a publication of Reed Business Information, Electronic Design Magazine, adivision of Penton Media, Inc., or PC Design Magazine, a publication of UP Media Group,Inc., as noted in the header of each article, respectively.
Bob Ross, Mentor Graphics Corp., past chair of the EIA IBIS Open Forum, wrote afine discussion about the future of IBIS modeling for Chapter 13. Bruce Archambeaultcontributed the article in Chapter 12 about reducing emissions, which I only edited. BradCole and Matt Hudale of Ansoft simulated the capacitance of many via configurations forChapter 5. To Gopa Parameswaran at Cisco, thanks for your simulations of via capacitance,although your data did not appear in the final version of the book. Steve Ems and RobertTalambiras of Lecroy piqued my interest in non-TEM modes of propagation during a visit tomy ranch in October of 2000. Roger Billings of Wideband Corporation deserves mention asthe world record-holder for fastest data conveyed across barbed-wire cabling (Chapter 2).Jeff Sonntag at Accelerant Networks was the first to focus my attention on howbackplane performance changes with temperature (Chapter 5). Thanks also to Jim Tavacoliat Accelerant for sending the cool pictures showing adaptive equalization at work inChapter 3.
The discussions I have been privileged to hold with Michael King, Ed Sayre, andDoug Smith have been of enormous value to me. Thank you for your friendship.My technical mentor Dr. Martin Graham of U.C. Berkeley has contributed hisenduring support, encouragement, and technical assistance over the past twenty years, aswell as having been the first to direct my attention toward the general features oftransmission line attenuation and how it varies with frequency. Thank you, Martin.
To my wonderful and understanding wife Liz, thank you for taking care of all thedetails of my life so that I could have time to write a book like this.
Regardless of the assistance of others, any remaining errors are entirely mine.
Information contained in this work has been obtained by Prentice Hallfrom sources believed to be reliable. However, neither Prentice Hall norits author guarantees the accuracy or completeness of any informationpublished herein and neither Prentice Hall nor its authors shall beresponsible for any errors, omission, or damages arising out of thisinformation.
NOTATIONAL CONVENTIONSThis book uses metric units, except for some common printed-circuit board dimensions,which are denoted in English units. Variables and general function names appear in italics.Constants, enumerators, and specific well-known functions appear in ordinary type (e.g.,f(x) = 1 + sin x). Matrix and vector-field quantities occur in boldface type.
CONTACTING THE AUTHORShould you spot something out of place in the text, or merely wish to discuss the finer pointsof transmission-line theory, I may be reached at my ranch high in the mountains near thetown of Twisp, Washington:
A great place to keep up with the latest developments in high-speed signaling is myweb site, www.sigcon.com. At that site I maintain a growing collection of articles abouthigh-speed digital phenomena, and information about my schedule of public seminars. Ifyou would like to read even more about signal integrity issues, sign up to receive mynewsletter. An errata page for this book is located on the site.
Howard Johnson, PhD, is the author of High-Speed Digital Design: AHandbook of Black Magic, Prentice-Hall, 1993, Fast Ethernet: Dawn of aNew Network, Prentice-Hall, 1996, and the Signal Integrity columnist forEDN magazine. He frequently conducts technical workshops for digitalengineers at Oxford University and other sites worldwide.
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