PCB EMC Control
- Second Line of Defense -
The most commonly acknowledged design approach to EMC compliance design is at the printed circuit board (PCB), or sometimes called a Printed Wire Board (PWB), level. The design is the most critical in the process, since EMI problems on a PCB cause EMI problems on cables, harnesses and at the system level.
Following are some tips and things of which to be aware:
- Layout design is critical to EMI Control:
- Component placement and orientation.
- Trace, power & ground-plane geometry.
- Signal paths & termination techniques
- Power & noise filtering.
- PCB's can resonate at critical frequencies, which may exacerbate EMI.
- Differential Mode EMI on Signal Traces:
- Loop antennae can radiate and pick up noise.
- Common Mode EMI on Signal Traces:
- Line antennae can radiate and pick up noise.
- Ground & power fluctuations can radiate noise.
- PCB-level circuit simulation techniques are useful to gain a ballpark knowledge of where your PCB layouts can be optimized for compliance.
Cable EMC Control
- Third Line of Defense -
Interconnect systems (cables & harnesses) are the most common avenues for EMI to exit or enter the PCB and system. Appropriate signal drivers & receivers, cable design and grounding techniques can help reduce EMI effects here.
Following are some tips and things of which to be aware:
- Cables disrupt EMC integrity of enclosures.
- INTRA-BOARD cables:
- Create antennae to radiate & pick up noise.
- INTER-BOARD cables:
- Create antennae to radiate & pick up noise.
- Create ground potential issues, thus inter-system EMC problems.
- Cables can resonate at critical frequencies, which may exacerbate EMI.
- Cable simulation techniques are useful to gain a ballpark knowledge of where your cable designs can be optimized for compliance.
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©2003 Richard M. (Dick) Haney
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