SILABS AN82 High-density multi channel oc-48 layout guidelines for the si5100 and si5110 Datasheet

AN82
HIGH-DENSITY MULTI CHANNEL OC-48 LAYOUT GUIDELINES
S i 5 1 0 0 A N D S i 5 11 0
Introduction
OC-48 small form-factor hot-pluggable modules (SFP)
allow designers to place a large number of OC-48 links
in a relatively small amount of space. As the density
increases, adjacent channels are more likely to interfere
with each other. When the Si5110 or Si5100 OC-48
transceivers are used to receive and transmit through
the SFP module, it is necessary to minimize the
adjacent channel coupling in order to meet the transmit
jitter generation requirements.
FOR THE
In addition, adjacent devices can couple to surrounding
devices if their TTL or high-speed traces can couple to
each other. Since PCB fabrication does not allow for
solid walls perpendicular to the plane of the board, a
"wall" of vias can be used to isolate nearby traces as
shown in Figure 1. Vias should be placed along the axis
of propagation no farther than 100 mil apart.
Diff Pair
Via Wall
Diff Pair
Background
The oscillator that generates the timing for the transmit
data within the transceiver stores energy in electric and
magnetic fields during oscillation. The magnetic fields
extend several inches (centimeters) from the device but
decrease in magnitude at a rate inversely proportional
to the square of the distance. Consequently, distance is
key to minimizing the adjacent channel coupling.
In addition, energy from other sources can couple into
the device through capacitive and mutually-inductive
means. These paths effectively reduce the distance that
an adjacent carrier appears.
Most materials do not provide any change in the
permeability of the region at RF and microwave
frequencies (Refer to Noise Reduction Techniques in
Electronic Systems, 2nd Edition 1988, pp182–7 by
Henry W. Ott). The most notable exception is metal.
Completely surrounding magnetic fields with sufficiently
thick metal isolates the fields.
Gnd
Planes
Magnetic
Field Lines
Figure 1. Stripline Via Wall Isolation
Power Supply Isolation (1.8 V and 3.3 V)
The oscillator within the transceiver relies on a clean
power supply to provide very low generated jitter. Noise/
interference from adjacent ICs couples electrically
through the power planes. Each transceiver device
should operate on a separate power island for both the
1.8 V and 3.3 V supplies. Ferrite beads should be used
to isolate the islands as shown in Figure 2.
VDD VDDIO
Layout Guidelines
The following layout guidelines are based on results
obtained from an experimental board as well as general
best-practice layout principles. The implementation of
these recommendations should be straightforward.
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Adjacent Channel Traces
(High-Speed and TTL)
Since the magnetic fields extend beyond the transceiver
device, mutual inductance exists between the oscillator
and the surrounding metal (traces, power planes, heatsinks, etc.). To minimize the effect of switching currents
from both TTL and high-speed I/O, these traces should
be run on stripline layers. With a stripline structure, at
least one power plane will isolate the traces from the
oscillator's magnetic fields, thereby reducing the
coupling.
Rev. 0.1 6/03
GND
Figure 2. Power Supply Isolation
Copyright © 2003 by Silicon Laboratories
AN82-DS01
AN82
Distance
Common
Metal
Heat-sink
Distance is fundamentally important when observing
coupling. Adjacent Si5110s should be physically
separated by no less than 300 mil (7.6 mm). Adjacent
channels can be further separated if alternating
transceiver devices are located on opposite sides of a
PCB (see Figure 3) or if alternating devices have
shorter and longer traces to/from the associated SFP
module (see Figure 4).
Metal
Pedestal
125 mil
(min)
C
O
8
-4
SF
P
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Channels 1, 3, 5 topside
Channels 2, 4, 6 bottom side
Figure 5. Common Heat-Sink Height Separation
Requirement
Figure 3. Staggered Device Placement
(Opposite Side)
O
Si5110
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
Si5110
Si5110
8
-4
C
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
P
SF
O
C
8
-4
Summary
P
SF
Si5110
Si5110
Si5110
Figure 4. Si5110 Staggered Device Placement
(Same Side)
The Si5110 and Si5100 devices are a perfect match for
OC-48 SFP modules in both size and feature set.
However, care must be taken to minimize interference
between adjacent channels on a multi-channel card.
Considering the physical channel spacing, power supply
filtering, and heat-sinking early in the design will help
reduce costly PCB redesigns. For further technical
questions regarding the Si5110, and Si5100, please
contact a Silicon Laboratories application engineer.
Heat-Sinks
The Si5110 and Si5100 do not normally require a heatsink and can operate with ambient temperatures at
85 °C during their lifetime. However, if metal heat
sinking is required, the minimum spacing between
devices will need to be increased because a metal heat
sink increases the device-to-device coupling.
If metal heat sinks are attached to a common metal
shell, it is necessary to separate the heat-sinks above
the top-side of the Si5110 or Si5100 by greater than
125 mil. The 125 mil minimum-height gap can be filled
by non-metallic heat transfer materials. See Figure 5.
2
PCB
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Notes:
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AN82
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