What Every PCB Designer Should Know - Return Current Path (with Eric Bogatin)

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 412

  • @Aemilindore
    @Aemilindore 4 года назад +176

    I can't stress enough how valuable this content is for the community.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад +5

      Thank you very much Paul

    • @abandonedcranium6592
      @abandonedcranium6592 4 года назад +5

      I agree. I'm just a hobbyist, but now I realize there is a lot of mis-leading electronics information on the internet. People were told information that they did not fully understand, then details were lost when that information was passed on to the next person. If you use a Xerox machine to make a copy of a copy of a copy, you'll have no information left in the end.

    • @Aemilindore
      @Aemilindore 4 года назад +1

      @@abandonedcranium6592 I also watch Phill's lab. It's an amaizing channel too. I wonder if this channel and that could do a combined video.

    • @AlexWhittemore
      @AlexWhittemore 3 года назад +1

      Agreed wholeheartedly.

  • @IanJohnstonblog
    @IanJohnstonblog 4 года назад +83

    Wow. This was such a kick ass video. Hard concepts explained in a very intuitive way.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад +1

      Thank you very much Ian

    • @matteo234321
      @matteo234321 4 года назад

      My thoughts exactly, amazing representation! Wish I learned many years ago. I mostly do low frequency digital circuits, but for some of the higher frequency communications this could be a life saver!

  • @RajasPoorna
    @RajasPoorna Год назад +3

    Thank you for being such a sweet host. Thank you to the guest speaker as well; he seems like such an honestly sweet learned man. This is all very heartwarming to see such high quality lectures for free. Thank you so much 🙏🙏

  • @rockydm4266
    @rockydm4266 4 года назад +4

    Eric Bogatin + Robert Feranec = the best of signal integrity ! thank you!!

  • @patrikstaron
    @patrikstaron 4 года назад +19

    I had this idea in mind since I was 15 years old and told myself that the voltage must gradually get throuth the conductor, not magically be there all at once. Now I finally see the details.

  • @JeffreyBoye
    @JeffreyBoye 4 года назад +19

    Bogatin is the man! Great choice of guest. 👍

  • @quickrd2095
    @quickrd2095 3 года назад +2

    Only 1 years with saw your all video...My Hardware Design skill made 10x better and my company when saw my hardware they made Surprised !...Thank a lot...love you...

  • @zoebarry1806
    @zoebarry1806 Месяц назад

    An absolute magic presentation. Designing a PCB is not a simple task as many may think. The schematic is the easiest part. Selecting auto route is probably the worst mistake when working with high frequency signals. There are valid reasons why different PCB materials exist.
    Thank you, this is a fascinating field on it’s own.

  • @jacobdavis000
    @jacobdavis000 4 года назад +13

    I thought I knew how to layout a board because I've been gaining experience, but this video shows me how little I know, so far. Thanks for giving me something to sink my teeth into. This is the most important layout video subject matter I've been able to find. I now need to produce a new better layout for my PCB project, after seeing this.

  • @glenmartin2437
    @glenmartin2437 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you both.
    Much of this was over my head, but it helped me understand the complexities of designing PCBs and not garbling a signal.
    Thanks, again.

  • @alyssamaefauni6230
    @alyssamaefauni6230 4 года назад +3

    I think this channel is very under-rated. The information I learned from you are very practical.

    • @exoops
      @exoops 3 года назад +1

      this is because less people are interested in complicated stuff, most people just need cat's videos

  • @danthomas9624
    @danthomas9624 3 года назад

    It was very helpful with your pauses in the video to give clarifications, Robert! Thank you!

  • @mesmith5706
    @mesmith5706 4 года назад +3

    wow, I so much appreciate the explanation of the impact of the dielectric thickness (h) in transmission line design.

  • @kentvandervelden
    @kentvandervelden 4 года назад +10

    Absolutely fascinating! Anytime two great engineers have a discussions like this, we're going to learn a lot.

  • @awdheshkumarmrt
    @awdheshkumarmrt Год назад +1

    Thanks Eric. I enjoyed learning about how we have to dive deeper into the concept of fields to understand the return currents.

  • @Detroit_Playa
    @Detroit_Playa 2 года назад +2

    Hobbyist here thank you for the info I've never been to school everything is self taught and videos like this are invaluable to someone like me. You guys are talking about stuff I've never even thought of but now that I've seen it that image of running returns over gaps and all the static will never leave my brain after this. When I'm making pcb's in the future I will apply all of this thank you.

  • @JonathanDFielding
    @JonathanDFielding 10 месяцев назад +1

    Food for thought. One thing you can do to fix a GND return gap, or say if you MUST run a trace over 2 different GNDs, or power planes, is you can couple them together with a capacitor. You essentially provide a High Frequency path for the return current to pass through the gap. It keeps DC from moving between, but allows the return current to continue to follow underneath the sharp edge transition of your positive signal.

  • @BeMuslimOnly
    @BeMuslimOnly 2 года назад

    thank you Mr. Robert and Eric Bigatin. it was very useful

  • @Electronics_Dreams
    @Electronics_Dreams 8 месяцев назад

    Many times I come back to this video to refresh my memory, really great master class!! Thanks Robert❤

  • @moseschan6363
    @moseschan6363 Год назад +1

    This really helped a lot sir, although i might cannot fully understand the whole video at once but it actually gives me a intuition of how is current flowing through a microscrip line. Thanks for your dedication of works in this video! Especially that current flowing with a gap plane graph, this saved me so much time to understand it! !

  • @hightechsystem_
    @hightechsystem_ 3 месяца назад

    Please keep doing your video interviews.. they are so valuable.

  • @OttoHunt
    @OttoHunt 2 года назад

    Differential pairs returning mainly via the gnd plane was a real eye-opener for me. Thanks!

  • @jarvenpaajani8105
    @jarvenpaajani8105 4 года назад +4

    This is really good. I actually have been struggling implementing 10/100 mbps ethernet with RMII and this video made me realize few bad design decisions on my latest board. Subscribed!

  • @jimmyji8339
    @jimmyji8339 5 месяцев назад

    quite clear and slow pace, friendly to beginners.

  • @mdchethan
    @mdchethan 4 года назад +7

    @Robert, great work, and this whole idea of talking to domain experts and bringing their insights to a larger audience are really really great. @Eric, no words, I can't imagine if someone else can explain signal integrity better than him.

  • @aamir99204
    @aamir99204 5 месяцев назад

    What an Amazing Video! Kudos to everyone who has put in the effort to put this together. As Robert rightly pointed out that most of the folks including me getting into the field of electronics believe that return current is the current that leaves the negative terminal and goes into ground, but now i have a much better understanding! Thankyou

  • @鄭峻杰-i2k
    @鄭峻杰-i2k 3 года назад

    Robert, thank you a lot. You just gave me a clear picture on how return current flows and where it flows.

  • @vpapanik
    @vpapanik 5 месяцев назад

    That was an amazing and very enlightening video ! Well done Robert ! I would also love to see more PCB design examples : good practices and bad practices in 4-layer boards, what happens in 2-layer boards and if anything makes sense in one-layer boards. Also how to keep any DC tracks noise free. Keep the good work, thank you !

  • @vyacheslavten708
    @vyacheslavten708 Год назад

    Thanks for your videos, it really helps me to increase my understanding when designing PCB.

  • @jacewalton6677
    @jacewalton6677 4 года назад

    Nice! Helped me understand the importance of the ground plan

  • @imignap
    @imignap 4 года назад +2

    Robert thank you for adding your insight at 13:44, this did help me understand the propagation a bit more. I dont see how that interpretations is incorrect either.

  • @maurozanata
    @maurozanata 4 года назад +11

    wow Robert, the videos dedicated to Signal Integrity are very useful. When I read "Eric Bogatin" I immediately put a like. I hope to see many more videos with Eric Bogatin.
    Other protagonists of these videos I suggest you "Rick Hartley".

  • @3deeguy
    @3deeguy 4 года назад +1

    WOW! WOW! This subject is super important. I've built circuits with multiple frequencies such as a microcontroller, with a wireless connection, with a PWM signal, with an SPI module... I thought a large ground plane was enough. I have to consider capacitances, inductances, current wave fronts...
    l have to put this video on a playlist. Thanks for posting!

  • @annacersongor8553
    @annacersongor8553 4 года назад

    Very Informative video, especially with the contribution of such a great figure as mr. ERIC BOGATIN. We are waiting to see more . Thanks a lot for sharing.

  • @burievsardor76
    @burievsardor76 3 года назад

    It is difficult to believe that such kind of videos are now available for free. Thanks a lot , Robert. Now because of you i know who is Eric Bogatin.

  • @alvangroen6127
    @alvangroen6127 3 года назад +1

    Great video like many other of you ! All help to improve reliability or fault rate of a product.
    I have been working on this stuff and related EMC behaviour for a few years.
    I learned, that the return current for higher frequencies does not look for the lowest ohmic return path, but looks for a return path that will include the smallest enclosed area available.
    So make a design, which facilitates this 'starting point' ; no gaps, short tracks, good (cable) shielding etc. You improve cross talk, but also minimize susceptibility for external electrical fields by minimalisation of the current loop size (including grounding). In our equipment we improved susceptibility for more than 40 dB for the higher frequencies, which we measured in our own very big EMC test lab. It was amazing to focus on these aspects of electronics, although it is 25 years ago now. Last remark .... a good design needs proper design of electronics, mechanics and interconnections (connectors an cabling). Teamwork !

  • @djadostyle
    @djadostyle 4 года назад +3

    Very very interesting as usual, now we (you) are moving more deeper in concept and I'm happy to see more and more participants. Great idea to get others experts involved. Maybe Dr Rick Hartley next time ?
    Thanks you Robert !

  • @konstantinponomarev1087
    @konstantinponomarev1087 4 года назад +2

    Hi, Robert.
    This video convinced me to enter to Eric’s SI class.
    Thank you

  • @Yreq
    @Yreq Год назад

    This video had opened my eyes, while blowing my mind. It gives me a bit of understanding of phenomenons that stands behind some electronic aplications obserwed in real life. Your video helped me to join some loose dots🙃

  • @vejymonsta3006
    @vejymonsta3006 4 года назад +8

    I think it would very valuable if every electronic engineer is taught about electrostatics and the impact they have on electronic devices. A lot of what goes into designing signal integrity with return paths, crosstalk etc. becomes intuitive when you understand how a very dense and very fast impulse forces its way through a design destroying all the barriers you thought were insulative. Generally, we just assume out of college that the impedance between traces is too great to be a concern, but that is only true in limited circumstances.

  • @rajendrarathod351
    @rajendrarathod351 3 года назад

    very much valuable content thanks to Mr.Eric & Mr. Robert

  • @terratrodder
    @terratrodder 4 года назад +7

    I've had a marginal interest in this topic but sure glad this video showed up in my list as now I'm really interested in delving into more! Wish I had instructors like Eric when I was in college, very effective at conveying information.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад

      Thank you terratrodder PS: I thought exactly the same, how lucky are Eric's students

  • @nihar0689
    @nihar0689 4 года назад +1

    Hi Robert, thanks for the video. It is always nice to learn from Dr. Eric Bogatin. My suggestion for future videos is that if you could get him to show how to do measurements on a PCB for parameters like cross talk, ground bounce etc. I remember him saying that you need to make sure that the oscilloscope probe does not become an antenna while doing such measurements which is a general mistake that new bees can make. So if we can see him demonstrate how to do such measurements that would be really helpful!!!!

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад

      Thank you Nihar. PS: Real measurements are on my list. Let's see how it goes as real measurements are more complicated than simulations (the biggest issue would be, that I do not have any good equipment to take the measurements).

  • @adamm9147
    @adamm9147 3 года назад

    Excellent presentation! More please!

  • @leonardosoliszamora1061
    @leonardosoliszamora1061 4 года назад

    Thanks to Eric and you Robert, to teach signal integrity to profesional designs. Regards from Chile 🇨🇱

  • @jackbenyamin8927
    @jackbenyamin8927 2 года назад

    Thank you
    Very helpful
    Please make more of these with more PCB samples

  • @Hadi-zw9mb
    @Hadi-zw9mb 3 года назад

    Nice video and explanation. At a very high frequency, something completely different happens in coupling and crosstalk.

  • @brus54per
    @brus54per 4 года назад +1

    Very, very interesting discussion! Thank you to you and to Eric!

  • @garimagarg2739
    @garimagarg2739 3 года назад

    It took me 2 hours to understand the whole discussion. It is worth it. I respect you both. Thank you. :)

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  3 года назад +1

      Thank you Garima PS: Sometimes I still keep learning new things even I have watched the talks number of times before

  • @Katupiry
    @Katupiry 4 года назад +1

    Wonderful video. Cemented various concepts what I had only visualized in my head.

  • @shravanmalagihal1229
    @shravanmalagihal1229 3 года назад

    Very Interesting video. Thank you for this great one. Please continue with much more.

  • @debasish2205
    @debasish2205 4 года назад

    Thanks for this in-depth video. Keep posting. Thanks to Eric🤗

  • @spver76
    @spver76 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation. Wish I had seen this earlier.

  • @7th_dwarf542
    @7th_dwarf542 2 года назад

    excellent topic and speaker. I wanted to learn about retun signals in differential lines recently. This video made me raise my eyebrows.

  • @ats89117
    @ats89117 4 года назад

    Best video ever! Very informative and will be getting much more material of Eric's to learn from. Please have him back if possible to finish telling us why copper pours can be the worst thing ever! I never heard this before, and like many people, I use copper ground pours everywhere...

  • @23lkjdfjsdlfj
    @23lkjdfjsdlfj 2 года назад

    OMG... this cleared up so many things for me. Every student should watch this!

  • @NiteshKumar-ss4gg
    @NiteshKumar-ss4gg 3 года назад

    Appreciate your effort and the way the terminologies are explained. Really loved it

  • @AbdullahKahramanPhD
    @AbdullahKahramanPhD 3 года назад +2

    I don’t know why, but our community became really educating recently and I am not complaining at all 😅

  • @danmarquez3971
    @danmarquez3971 3 года назад

    WOW!! This was a great video that demystified a lot! THANK YOU!

  • @gankankg
    @gankankg 4 года назад +1

    Great video !!! Thanks to robert and eric, looking forward to more such videos

  • @fireblade31967
    @fireblade31967 3 года назад

    Thanks a lot Robert and Eric. Very Nicely explained, very nicely laid out presentation. The visuals are awesome, kudos to the person in Japan. I learned a lot from this today.

  • @michaelmichalski4588
    @michaelmichalski4588 11 месяцев назад

    That's really cool. With the differential pair over a ground plane you can see why it has a shielding effect. It's not so much that the fields cancel, they do, but that doesn't really describe all of what's what's happening. There are lots of ways fields can cancel. In the case of a differential pair over a ground plane, it has a lot of quadrupole charachter. The monopole and dipole terms will be there, but reduced and the quadrupole term will fall off rapidly. This has implications for optimal spacing of the conductors.
    Without the ground plane you have more dipole and no quadrupole.

  • @prototype7970
    @prototype7970 2 года назад

    I am only a beginner un PCB design but it very interesting video. Thank you for making them easy to understand !

  • @nyaaark.5121
    @nyaaark.5121 3 года назад

    Hi robert! I am an engineering student, I would like to thank you for providing us great content! This was very helpful! Thank you!

  • @alexistantot7332
    @alexistantot7332 4 года назад +1

    Since the beginning of these videos, I check almost every day if a new one has been published ! I have read about these concepts many times, I tried to apply them as much as I could in several PCB designs but it is the first time that they start to all make sense together in my head. I'm super curious also about the test boards he talks about to illustrate those principles ! Thank you for the videos :)

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад +1

      Thank you very much Alexis PS: I also made a note about the boards ... if it will be possible, I would be very interested to make some videos from real measurements.

  • @pnjunction5689
    @pnjunction5689 4 года назад +4

    Outstanding video! Thank you alot, Robert and Eric! I really enjoy watching these kind of videos. There is a lot to learn!

  • @abc1w
    @abc1w 2 года назад

    Your videos are amazing and inspiring at the same time; to go a step ahead in learning more about PCBs. Eric's talk has been an eye opener towards practicality of how a transmission line works and in his words "there's a lot to signal integrity".

  • @johnallen3555
    @johnallen3555 4 года назад

    thankyou for shareing this in conversation

  • @moienm8802
    @moienm8802 3 года назад

    This was an awesome presentation. Thanks Eric and Robert.

  • @st3ddyman
    @st3ddyman 4 года назад +1

    Finally I understand it! Many thanks to you both

  • @C0wb0yh3nk
    @C0wb0yh3nk 4 года назад

    Wow this was such an eye opener, very glad I saw this. I think anybody interested in electronics should see this video. I have never seen it explained so good!

  • @seanjosef5014
    @seanjosef5014 4 года назад

    Great video, would like to see more explanations done with visual examples in the future!

  • @asingh4152
    @asingh4152 2 года назад +1

    Robert you are awesome. Appreciate you spending so much time and effort making content for all of us. Thank you!!

  • @spacewaves94
    @spacewaves94 3 года назад

    Love these videos and the call format, high quality stuff

  • @umersohail31
    @umersohail31 2 года назад

    Thank you Robert & Eric! Can you please make a video on design issues of power electronics?

  • @modulate72
    @modulate72 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks Robert, these videos are pure gold.

  • @ThePaulus2010
    @ThePaulus2010 4 года назад +6

    gotta love this! awesome.. and super you got Eric into this!

  • @williamwellingtonmentz1893
    @williamwellingtonmentz1893 4 года назад

    Great subject with great explanation!

  • @abhishekupadhyay3419
    @abhishekupadhyay3419 4 года назад

    Thanks Robert, this is very nice video with the 'Eric Bogatin', I liked your interruption, they were on point.

  • @simangundeep8770
    @simangundeep8770 3 года назад

    Thanks a lot Robert for a great and valuable discussion video ever...👍👍

  • @georgemallard4120
    @georgemallard4120 4 года назад +1

    Eric is a master at explanation!

  • @niflheims
    @niflheims 8 месяцев назад

    Awesome! Great educational contents, thank you very much for sharing your knowledge. It’s the fundamentals of science. 🙏

  • @saadtiwana
    @saadtiwana 3 года назад

    Excellent video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @guillep2k
    @guillep2k 4 года назад

    Super video!!! I liked you 100 quick tips video series, but this series is superior!! Thanks, Robert.

  • @BB-me9po
    @BB-me9po 4 года назад +9

    Great video as usual, Robert. I read a paper somewhere that you can help mitigate the effects of cut planes by carefully placing capacitors ACROSS the gap. If the gap is on the ground plane beneath a signal on the top, the signal line would reach the location of the ground gap and right where that gap occurs, you plant a capacitor on the signal line on the top plane that allows the signal to continue. Somehow, that capacitor helps to minimize the effects of the gap on the return current. I am curious if you could investigate this in the future and determine how effective it is, or how ineffective it is. Thanks.

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад

      Thank you B B PS: I read the same

    • @rakeshv46
      @rakeshv46 4 года назад +1

      Yeh...in advanced layout course, mr.Robert mentioned about stitching caps....I am also curious if you make brief in future videos....

  • @changyiful
    @changyiful 3 года назад

    Thank you so much to share this discussion for me. Only one thing I'd like to notice is that the talking of differential pair return path wasn't finish. I'm eager to know what's going on if we pull differential pair far from the reference ground plane.

  • @zhitailiu3876
    @zhitailiu3876 4 года назад +1

    "It’s all about the space 'Bout the space... space... space... space"...... as Dan Beeker sings :)
    It's a good exercise to use this dynamic intuition to think about how the return current (energy) is built up when a track changes layers through vias.
    Good video as always! Thanks, Robert.

  • @mondermechri847
    @mondermechri847 3 года назад

    Thank you Robert and Eric

  • @JesusSoonComing
    @JesusSoonComing 4 года назад

    Robert, you are the best! Keep up the good work...

  • @acanadianbear6966
    @acanadianbear6966 4 года назад +1

    I'm a CE and they taught us these concepts during our TL and Waves class. Our prof built a pretty nice TL simulator that really helps visualize these concepts. I'll see if I can find it and share it here.

    • @acanadianbear6966
      @acanadianbear6966 4 года назад

      @Gabriel Quijote Hey Gabe! I found the files. Let me know how I can share them. Github I guess?

    • @RobertFeranec
      @RobertFeranec  4 года назад

      Thank you Gabriel for sharing. A Github link would be perfect

    • @acanadianbear6966
      @acanadianbear6966 4 года назад

      @Gabriel Quijote github.com/gabrielkarras/Transmission-Line-Simulations.git Here ya go lads. Let me know if you come up with any issues.

  • @lizard101pwd
    @lizard101pwd 5 месяцев назад

    Great video! What I am really interested in is. If you have a multilayer board with Power plane- signal plane - gnd plane. Is there any return path over the power Planes as well? If you consider that at high frequencies GND and PWR are shorted by bypass capacitors? If so then it might be a problem splitting the powert planes as well (for multiple sources its necessary). So for good signal integrity one would need to avoid stackups like this.

  • @Nik930714
    @Nik930714 4 года назад +1

    Really nice video. I really should show it to my boss, every time i argue we should add more layers to a board.

  • @adamian6696
    @adamian6696 2 года назад

    Thank you Robert, awesome video.

  • @shubhangigurudiwan1753
    @shubhangigurudiwan1753 2 года назад +1

    This video was really helpful. Thank you so much. I have a question though. If you have a power plane also right next to this signal line, will equal amount of displacement current flow through that also? (Since that plane is also seeing the change in electric field). This would mean that there should be both a power plane and a ground plane adjacent to all signals with no cut in them?

  • @navidrct
    @navidrct 4 года назад

    he explain simple and sufficient and I loved it.thanks a lot

  • @Muftat2ify
    @Muftat2ify 3 года назад

    Great explanation. Thanks a lot. Please do more videos

  • @devdattchattopadhyay5380
    @devdattchattopadhyay5380 2 года назад

    Great video! The concepts are very well explained. Thank you Robert and Dr. Bogatin!

  • @highspeedboarddesignsimulation
    @highspeedboarddesignsimulation 2 года назад

    Great sharing !!!
    your videos always informative and you added Eric that is wonderful.

  • @georgechatzidakis3111
    @georgechatzidakis3111 4 года назад

    Congratulations to both of you Robert and Eric! Great video! Robert continue this kind of videos!

  • @AdamFJH
    @AdamFJH 4 года назад

    I like this video style. Very educational and very well explained.