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
4.1. Pin Distribution and Ball Pitches
The examples in this section use the Agilex™ 3 A3C100 device package B18A to show the pin distribution for different functions. Generally, the power pins are concentrated in the middle area while general purpose I/O (GPIO) pins are located at the device periphery.
Figure 12. Distribution of Pins in Agilex™ 3 A3C100 (Package B18A)The A3C100 device package B18A uses a VPBGA package with different ball pitches in different BGA functional areas, ranging from 0.65 mm to 1.45 mm. For more details, refer to the specific device footprint.
Figure 13. Pitches in the GPIO Area Including DDR and Power Area
GPIO pins at the outermost two rows or columns have 0.65mm ball pitch, as shown in the following figure. To avoid PTH vias and simplify the inner layer routing, Altera recommends using microstrip routing for the GPIOs on the two outermost rows in the top layer.
Figure 14. Example of 0.65 mm Pitch at Two Outermost Rows/Columns in the B18A PackageIn this figure, the highlighted area indicates the locations of balls with 0.65 mm ball pitch.
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