J
Joel Kolstad
(I know, this is a never-ending discussion...)
I came across this article today:
http://www.analog.com/library/analogdialogue/archives/41-06/ground_bounce.html
.... and if starts out pretty well, but I'm not sure I completely buy into the
guy's later advice. Specifically, in figure 10, if he's going to insist on
making a "surgical cut" in the ground plane, it seems as though putting the
ground pour "draw bridge" beneath the high-side switch would make more sense
than placing it on the far left as shown. Secondly, without any cuts in the
ground plane whatsoever, since much of the return current will still tend to
run underneath the signal traces anyway, I suspect there might actually be
less EMI without any cuts than the way shown.
Thoughts?
This seems like a case where the guys who advocate that leaving your ground
plane completely solid makes the design's performance as good or better than
strategically cutting it up does are probably right.
---Joel
I came across this article today:
http://www.analog.com/library/analogdialogue/archives/41-06/ground_bounce.html
.... and if starts out pretty well, but I'm not sure I completely buy into the
guy's later advice. Specifically, in figure 10, if he's going to insist on
making a "surgical cut" in the ground plane, it seems as though putting the
ground pour "draw bridge" beneath the high-side switch would make more sense
than placing it on the far left as shown. Secondly, without any cuts in the
ground plane whatsoever, since much of the return current will still tend to
run underneath the signal traces anyway, I suspect there might actually be
less EMI without any cuts than the way shown.
Thoughts?
This seems like a case where the guys who advocate that leaving your ground
plane completely solid makes the design's performance as good or better than
strategically cutting it up does are probably right.
---Joel