Technical Education Webinar Series
Title: The Impact of Plated Through Hole Vias on RF Performance
Date: April 6, 2017
Time: 8am PT/ 11am ET
Sponsored by: Rogers Corporation
Presented by: John Coonrod
Overview:
Plated through hole (PTH) vias are commonly used for RF Printed Circuit Board (PCB) applications. The use of PTH vias for grounding or repetitive grounding is typically less concerning, however when PTH vias are used to transition a signal trace from one copper layer to another, the via property can have a significant impact on signal integrity. This webinar will give an overview of several studies done to evaluate the impact of PTH vias on RF performance when transitioning the signal trace to different copper layers within a multilayer PCB. The agenda is:
The test vehicle is a multilayer circuit and is a stripline configuration. The circuit is designed to show the impact of transitioning the signal trace from one copper layer to another, while maintaining the stripline structure. These signal transitions are less problematic at lower microwave frequencies (< 2 GHz) however at higher frequencies these transitions can cause reflections, poor return loss, impedance ringing and degraded insertion loss. This study will demonstrate with measured results, several different PTH via designs used to transition a signal trace to different copper layers with improved bandwidth and signal integrity.
Presenter Bio:
John Coonrod is a Technical Marketing Manager for Rogers Corporation, Advanced Connectivity Solutions. John has been involved with the Printed Circuit Board industry for over 28 years. The initial 11 years was spent in the Flexible Printed Circuit Board industry responsible for circuit design, applications, processing and materials engineering. Following this experience, John supported the High Frequency Rigid Printed Circuit Board materials made by Rogers in regards to circuit fabrication, application support and electrical characterization studies of these materials. John is the Vice Chair on the IPC D24C High Frequency Task Group and holds a degree from Arizona State University in Bachelor of Science, Electrical Engineering.