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ECE 477 Digital Systems Senior Design Project Fall 2005 Homework 6: Printed Circuit Board Layout Design Due: Thursday, October 6, at Classtime Team Code Name: ___Recursively Awesome__________ Group No. __7____ Team Member Completing This Homework: ______Colleen Shea_____________ NOTE: This is the third in a series of four “design component” homework assignments, each of which is to be completed by one team member. The completed homework will count for 10% of the team member’s individual grade. I. Introduction The project presented is a highly precise pan and tilt platform for a camera or associated peripheral. The focus of this project is the continuous and smooth motion of a platform with two degree accuracy. A sample application for this product is a video conference room. The camera platform could be used to change the video feed from one speaker to the next. Each participant in the conference would have an assigned seat, or degree reference. The participant could press a button on his or her cell phone (or keypad) and the camera would rotate to face the speaker. The PCB design layout was constructed with many considerations for both decreasing EMI interference, and creating a friendly user interface. II. PCB considerations There were many considerations which went into the PCB layout design. The primary goal of successful PCB layout is reducing EMI as much as possible. Electromechanical interference (EMI) is a common and often overlooked problem in circuitry. Noise coupled on wires can wreak havoc on a system, especially in the age of faster and faster switching circuitry. Signal error on a digital signal could case an input pin to read a ‘high’ value instead of a ‘low’ value, which potentially could prevent the circuit from working correctly. EMI associated problems are practically impossible to debug, so it is crucial that sufficient care is taken to reduce and hopefully eliminate such issues. Component placement is the first step in eliminating EMI. Recall that analog noise is caused by changing current loads, and digital noise is caused by switching devices. Hence, the ECE 477 Digital Systems Senior Design Project Fall 2005 analog and digital circuitry should be physically separated on the board to minimize coupling. On this particular board, analog components are on the left hand side of the board, and digital components are on the right hand side. The only difficulty faced with component placement was the operational amplifier. The op-amp is being powered by +12 Volts (analog), but is directly connected to the text to speech chip, which is being powered by +5 Volts (digital). A compromise was made and the chip was placed towards the bottom of the board in the center. Ground loops are another common problem which contributes to unwanted noise factors. All grounds have finite impedance. This impedance causes voltage drops due to return currents. These voltage drops cause unwanted noise. To decrease the severity of this problem, the analog and digital grounds should be kept separate and tied together at a single point. This was done as much as possible in layout, although features of the software made specific wire placement difficult. The problem arose when a specified connection was desired between two pins, but layout had connected them differently (such as through a third pin). Trace length, width and via number are also important consideration factors in layout design. Everything was done to reduce both the trace length and the total number of vias. The board has 59 vias total. Trace length is a variable factor; there are tradeoffs every time a component is moved. In one position certain traces will be shorter; in another a different set will be shorter. It is important to focus on the critical trace lengths, such as the length from the ICs to the decoupling capacitors. Each IC in the circuit has a decoupling capacitor. The purpose of the decoupling capacitors is to provide instantaneous current to the chips during switching. The capacitors are placed as close as possible to the respective chips because wires inherently have inductance. It is intuitively obvious that the longer the wire, the greater the inductance. Current cannot switch instantaneous through an inductor. If the path from the capacitor to the IC is long, no current can be sourced, defeating the purpose of the decoupling capacitor. The capacitors are most frequently placed directly under the chip in this particular schematic. A similar reasoning was used for the placement of diodes D2 – D9. These diodes are designed to protect from inductive kickback. Trace width is also important, in that the width of the power and ground traces need to be relatively large compared to the other traces. This is due to the higher currents that will be traveling through these traces. A PCB trace-width calculator was used to calculate a conservative estimate of 40 mils for these traces. Also, traces must not make 90 degree or larger ECE 477 Digital Systems Senior Design Project Fall 2005 turns. Current can be thought of as water flow – 90 degree angles provide too much physical resistance to the current path for effective performance. Floating pins provided a challenge as well. After considerable debate it was decided that two unused PLD inputs would be placed through a resistor to ground. The purpose of this design is the input port pins are now available for use if need be without cutting the board. All other unused inputs are tied directly to ground, per the PALCE data sheet. Finally, the placement of headers and potentiometers was chosen for optimal accessibility. Wherever possible the headers were placed on the side of the board, and the potentiometers were all placed on the top of the board. Additional headers were added to the schematic for PLD inputs and outputs. It is prudent to note that the board does have the team name in silk screen in the lower right hand corner. It is not visible because it is white. III. List of References [1] “MAX5035 DC-DC Converter Datasheet”, [Online Document], 2005 September, Available HTTP: http://www.maxim-ic.com/quick_view2.cfm/qv_pk/3991 [2] “PALCE16V8 Family Datasheet”, [Online Document], 2005 September, Available HTTP: http://shay.ecn.purdue.edu/~dsml/ece270/Refs/Pld/palce16v8.pdf [3] “9S12C Module Connections”, [Online Document], 2005 September, Available HTTP: http://shay.ecn.purdue.edu/~dsml/ece362/MiniPrj/module_connections.pdf [4] “System Design and Layout Techniques for Noise Reduction in MCU-Based Systems”. Motorola Semiconductor Application note AN1259/D [Online Document Available HTTP: http://shay.ecn.purdue.edu/~dsml/ece477/Homework/Fall2005/AN1259.pdf [5] “System Design and Layout Techniques for Noise Reduction in MCU-Based Systems”. Motorola Semiconductor Application note AN1259/D [Online Document Available HTTP: http://shay.ecn.purdue.edu/~dsml/ece477/Homework/Fall2005/AN1259.pdf [6] “ANSI PCB Trace Width calculator”, [Online Document], 2005 Available HTTP: http://www.desmith.com/NMdS/Electronics/TraceWidth.html [7] “PCB Trace Width calculator”, [Online Document], 2005 Available HTTP:http://www.mgchemicals.com/products/popup/calc-pcbtrace.html ECE 477 Digital Systems Senior Design Project Fall 2005