TI AN-2235

Application Report
SNOA869A – April 2012 – Revised May 2013
AN-2235 Circuit Board Design for LMH6517/21/22 and
Other High-Speed IF/RF Feedback Amplifiers
.....................................................................................................................................................
ABSTRACT
High-bandwidth, high-performance amplifiers require care in board layout techniques in order to ensure
optimum performance. This paper will address the key components of PCB design for high-performance
amplifiers, including the new LMH6521 and LMH6522 DVGAs.
1
2
Contents
General Description ......................................................................................................... 1
Conclusion ................................................................................................................... 5
List of Figures
1
1
Supply Bypass Capacitors - Double Vias Used for Lower Inductance............................................... 2
2
Illustration of Metal Removed From Beneath Amplifier Input and Output Pins ..................................... 2
3
Filter Design ................................................................................................................. 3
4
Amplifier With No Common Mode Load
5
Amplifier With Common Mode Load ...................................................................................... 4
6
Amplifier With High-Frequency Common Mode Load .................................................................. 4
7
CMRR of the LMH6522 DVGA ............................................................................................ 4
8
Filters With and Without Common Mode Termination ................................................................. 5
9
Filters With and Without Common Mode High-Frequency Bypassing ............................................... 5
.................................................................................
3
General Description
When designing a printed circuit board (PCB) there are a few key considerations. High-speed amplifiers
require good power supply bypassing, low parasitic capacitance on the input and output pins, and good
termination of the signal paths.
Providing power to a high-speed amplifier is difficult because the amplifier will draw both DC as well as AC
power. The DC power is usually the easiest. The LMH6522, for example, contains four amplifiers and
requires only 370 mA of current at a nominal 5 V. The LMH6522 has a bandwidth of 1.4GHz. This means
that the power supplies must be low impedance not only at DC, but also at 1.4GHz. This condition
requires some special care. When selecting power supply bypass capacitors, the capacitors should offer a
low impedance up to the amplifier 3dB bandwidth. That means that they should have a low series
resistance and low parasitic inductance. The power supply bypass capacitors should be located within 4
mm of the amplifier supply pins, and any vias used to connect the capacitors to the power supply or
ground planes should be designed for low inductance. Using multiple vias can help reduce via inductance.
An example of supply bypass capacitor layout is shown in Figure 1. There are a few things to note in the
figure. One is that there are two capacitors used in parallel. For a given capacitor, using devices in parallel
reduces the equivalent series resistance (ESR) as well as the parasitic inductance. This can offer a
significantly higher series resonant frequency (SRF) than could be achieved by one capacitor. Another
common technique with parallel capacitors is to use different value capacitors in order to stagger the
resonant frequency of the capacitors over a larger frequency range. It is common practice to use values a
decade apart, such as 0.1 µF and 0.01 µF.
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SNOA869A – April 2012 – Revised May 2013
Submit Documentation Feedback
AN-2235 Circuit Board Design for LMH6517/21/22 and Other High-Speed
IF/RF Feedback Amplifiers
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
1
General Description
www.ti.com
While they are fairly new to the market, at least one company is now offering capacitors with reversed
aspect ratios. The conductive contacts are placed on the long edge of the capacitor to provide lower
parasitic resistance and inductance. The author has not yet tested this new capacitor configuration, but
the datasheet specifications look very good.
Figure 1. Supply Bypass Capacitors - Double Vias Used for Lower Inductance
Figure 2. Illustration of Metal Removed From Beneath Amplifier Input and Output Pins
While capacitance to ground is desirable for power supply pins, the output pins of high-speed amplifiers
are very sensitive to capacitive loading. With high-impedance amplifiers output capacitance will cause a
dramatic loss of bandwidth. With low-impedance feedback amplifiers, capacitive loading will cause a loss
of phase margin and can cause gain peaking or instability. One way to reduce capacitive loading on the
amplifier output pins is to remove portions of any metal layers beneath the pins. This is shown in
Figure 2 .
2
AN-2235 Circuit Board Design for LMH6517/21/22 and Other High-Speed
IF/RF Feedback Amplifiers
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
SNOA869A – April 2012 – Revised May 2013
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General Description
www.ti.com
Figure 3. Filter Design
One very important, but often overlooked, consideration for board layout is proper loading and termination
of the signal path. This is especially important when only a small amount of the amplifier bandwidth is
being used. For instance, the example shown in Figure 3 is designed for a 100 MHz-wide filter centered at
250 MHz. The differential filters provide fifth order selectivity and are designed for 100 Ω differential
impedance. While the filters are impedance matched at 250 MHz, the LMH6521 amplifier has a bandwidth
of 1.2 GHz. The filters will present reactive load conditions outside of the filter pass-band. At higher
frequencies the filter reactance, as well as any transmission line impedance transformation, should be
considered. For instance, if a filter is designed to present a short circuit at very high frequencies, a one
quarter wavelength of transmission line can transform this into an open circuit at the amplifier input. At
1GHz approximately 4cm of trace on an FR4 substrate equals one quarter wavelength.
With low-impedance output amplifiers like the LMH6517/21/22 the output pins normally require resistors to
match the impedance of following stages. Just as with power supply bypass capacitors, it is important to
keep the termination resistors close to the DVGA output pins.
Common Mode Floating
1 µH
RT
+
LMH6521
RT
.
1 µH
Figure 4. Amplifier With No Common Mode Load
SNOA869A – April 2012 – Revised May 2013
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AN-2235 Circuit Board Design for LMH6517/21/22 and Other High-Speed
IF/RF Feedback Amplifiers
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
3
General Description
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Common Mode Terminated
at all Frequencies
1 PH
RCM
+
LMH6521
RT
.
RT
1 PH
RCM
Figure 5. Amplifier With Common Mode Load
Common Mode Shorted to
Ground at High Frequencies
1 PH
RT
+
LMH6521
RT
.
1 PH
Figure 6. Amplifier With High-Frequency Common Mode Load
Differential signal paths are chosen due to their immunity to many forms of noise. This is because most
distant noise sources will couple into a differential signal path as common-mode noise rather than
differential noise. In theory, common-mode noise on a differential signal path is of little concern since
many elements in the signal path will “reject” the common-mode noise. This is correct in many cases.
However, care must still be taken to keep the signal free from excessive noise. One reason is that at very
high frequencies many active elements do not have very good common-mode rejection (CMRR). Baluns
are one circuit element that have poor CMRR at very high frequencies. Many amplifiers also have trouble
suppressing common-mode noise at very high frequencies. Many high-speed analog-to-digital converters
(ADC) do not even specify CMRR at all.
-10
Maximum Gain
16dB Attenuation
-20
CMRR (dBc)
-30
-40
-50
-60
-70
-80
1
10
100
FREQUENCY (MHz)
1000
Figure 7. CMRR of the LMH6522 DVGA
4
AN-2235 Circuit Board Design for LMH6517/21/22 and Other High-Speed
IF/RF Feedback Amplifiers
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
SNOA869A – April 2012 – Revised May 2013
Submit Documentation Feedback
Conclusion
www.ti.com
As shown in Figure 7 the LMH6522 DVGA has excellent CMRR at modest frequencies, but as frequencies
increase, the CMRR gets worse. Fortunately, the board layout can help here as well. As shown in the
design of the filter. Creative use of the filter elements and the termination resistors can help reduce
common mode noise with very small changes in component configurations. Using capacitors to ground or
providing resistive termination to ground directs the common-mode energy to ground instead of
conducting it to the next circuit element.
Common Mode Floating
Common Mode Terminated to
Ground at all Frequencies
BETTER
BAD
Figure 8. Filters With and Without Common Mode Termination
Common Mode Floating
BAD
Common Mode Terminated to
Ground at High Frequencies
GOOD
Figure 9. Filters With and Without Common Mode High-Frequency Bypassing
2
Conclusion
High-performance circuit elements require support from a carefully planned printed circuit-board layout. By
following the following key guidelines, high-speed, high-performance circuits will perform to their highest
potential.
• Place bypass capacitors close to supply pins
• Locate termination resistors close to output pins
• Remove metal from beneath input and output pins
• Terminate transmission lines
• Keep filters close to the amplifier
• Provide both differential and common mode termination
SNOA869A – April 2012 – Revised May 2013
Submit Documentation Feedback
AN-2235 Circuit Board Design for LMH6517/21/22 and Other High-Speed
IF/RF Feedback Amplifiers
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
5
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