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Altera_Forum's avatar
Altera_Forum
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15 years ago

FPGA Powering PCB Guidelines??

Could someone provide some PCB design guidelines concerning powering my EP3C16Q240 FPGA? I can only use a 2 layer design, and I need 1.2 V to power the FPGA core and 2.5 V to power all the I/O buffers. Should I use some kind of "voltage bus" for each of the voltage values then connect each pin to those buses and decouple accordingly with capacitors? What if just I connect the voltage pins (of the same value) together, then connect some of them to the corresponding voltage regulator? Would this cause some of those pins to receive reduced voltage and even design failure?

Thanks

16 Replies

  • Altera_Forum's avatar
    Altera_Forum
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    Hi,

    Who is forceing you to use two layers? Send me a PM and I will suggest ways and reading material to convince the required parties to go to at least 4 layers.
  • Altera_Forum's avatar
    Altera_Forum
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    This can happen in a company when someone with more "force" than you does not have the updated knowledge about the positiv side of multilayer and the field effects inside a pcb when signal energie is transformed into heat instead of radiated emisions.

    i personaly had several discussions in the past and each time it was hard to get the okay from the "force" to give multilayer "a try".

    luckiely today they all know about it.

    but maybe it is only a personal used pcb and 2 layer is easier to make at home
  • Altera_Forum's avatar
    Altera_Forum
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    I am "forced" to implement the design in 2 layers only because of our lab equipment. I didn't know there are people who think that 2 layer is better than multilayer :)

  • Altera_Forum's avatar
    Altera_Forum
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    so you are manufacturing the pcb own your own, not by a professional service

    okay 2 layers are easily self made of course they are cheaper, if you forget shielding and reliability but makes a design over all more expensiv as a multilayer with correct design rules and setup
  • Altera_Forum's avatar
    Altera_Forum
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    Hi,

    If you are useing a cyclone III and try to put it on two layers you will have problems. You must follow http://www.altera.com/literature/dp/cyclone3/pcg-01003.pdf I would suggest that you do use 4 or more layers there is little cost difference between that and 2 layers if you use an external company to make the PCB, compared to the cost of the components. Have a look at http://www.pcbtrain.co.uk/

    If anyone questions why you have gone to 4 or more layers point out that it is 10X more expensive to fix the radio emssions issues at the enclosure level and 100X to 1000X more expensive to fix the problems in the field.

    If this is for your function generator, then it will be probably impossiable to get good performance with two layers.