| Eliminating Unwanted Noise Coupling |
| Written by Pat Carrier | |||
| Monday, 30 April 2012 18:17 | |||
Controlling for densely packed interconnects.When high frequencies are involved, energy is traveling everywhere. Whether it be to or from an RF device, or purposefully directed by an antenna, or the unwanted emissions from electronics devices that require you to turn them off during takeoff and landing, high-frequency noise really gets around. On a printed circuit board level, such noise coupling is usually referred to as crosstalk. But crosstalk isn’t limited to one line coupling onto another line. Energy can be transferred from one via to another, even if those vias are on opposite ends of the board. It can also be coupled through the power system. These other methods of energy transfer aren’t what are generally referred to as “crosstalk,” but they yield the same result: unwanted energy coupled from one place to the next.
Pat Carrier is a technical marketing engineer at Mentor Graphics (mentor.com); This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
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