1. Overview
2. BGA Footprint and Land Pattern
3. General PCB Design Considerations
4. VPBGA PCB Routing Guidelines
5. MBGA PCB Routing Guidelines
6. EMIF PCB Routing Guidelines (VPBGA and MBGA)
7. MIPI Interface Layout Design Guidelines (VPBGA and MBGA)
8. True Differential I/O Interface PCB Routing Guidelines
9. Power Distribution Network Design Guidelines
10. Document Revision History for the PCB Design Guidelines: Agilex™ 3 FPGAs and SoCs
9.1. Agilex™ 3 Power Distribution Network Design Guidelines Overview
9.2. Power Delivery Overview
9.3. Board Power Delivery Network Recommendations
9.4. Board LC Recommended Filters for Noise Reduction in Combined Power Delivery Rails
9.5. PCB PDN Design Guideline for Unused GTS Transceiver
9.6. PCB Voltage Regulator Recommendation for PCB Power Rails
9.7. Board PDN Simulations
9.8. Agilex™ 3 Device Family PDN Design Summary
3.1. Impedance Tolerances
- Strictly control the impedance tolerance of high-speed traces. Generally, you can use ±10% tolerance for stripline impedance. However, a ±7% tolerance is better.
- Breakout routing usually has limited routing space, which may cause impedance discontinuity. To reduce the impedance discontinuity for better return loss performance, optimize the breakout routing trace geometries.
- Microstrip channel loss may be higher if the solder mask is lossy, offsetting the benefit of the low-loss PCB material. Microstrip channel generally has higher crosstalk compared to the stripline with the same spacing.