Design Automation


Using guard rings to minimise noise

28 January 2004 Design Automation

Although the effects of noise problems in digital and analog portions of circuitry can be very different, they do not necessarily need different solutions. Often the root cause is the same - the board layout has placed sensitive tracks or pins next to noisy tracks or pins. Clearly, the first thing to try is to physically separate the noisy traces from the high-impedance lines. If this is not possible, there is another way.

Let us consider a digital example - a PWM pulse interfering with a low-power oscillator circuit. Since the oscillator circuit is designed to draw very little power during operation, it has a very high internal impedance. As a result, the switching noise of the PWM pulse is capacitively-coupled from trace to trace into the oscillator circuit. This will cause clock jitter and, at worst, clock irregularity. If it is not possible to separate the traces sufficiently, the answer is to use a guard ring, as shown in Figure 1A.

Figure 1. Digital circuits may require a guard ring (A) around the oscillator pins of the controller or processor. Analog circuits may require a guard ring (B) around high impedance pins of the amplifier device
Figure 1. Digital circuits may require a guard ring (A) around the oscillator pins of the controller or processor. Analog circuits may require a guard ring (B) around high impedance pins of the amplifier device

The results of noise in an analog circuit can be equally destructive, even though the way in which the problem arises may be very different. A typical example would be a high-impedance pin of an operational amplifier located close to a track with a different voltage potential or, even worse, switching noise. It is very easy to overlook the first possibility.

For example, if the input pins of an operational amplifier have a very high impedance, the input bias current will be as low as a few picoamps at room temperature. The leakage current between the higher-potential track and the high-impedance one will make the input bias current of the amplifier appear to be higher than it really is. This leakage current could be a result of close traces and aggravated by humidity, board contamination or dust. The leakage current can be as much as five to 10 times higher than the input bias current, and can create severe problems. This is another example where the pins may need a guard ring as shown in Figure 1B.

A low-impedance guard ring, which separates sensitive operations from higher voltage or noisy events, is a very useful technique. Low impedance implies that it has low resistance as well as low inductance. In Figure 1A, the guard ring surrounds the processor or controller pins, oscillator clock and capacitors. Ground is connected to the guard ring to establish a low impedance potential. The guard ring in Figure 1B is connected to a low-impedance voltage that has a similar level to that on the input pins of the amplifier.

There are three common places to find these low impedance voltages. Ground is the most likely connection and this is the best solution if one of the amplifier inputs is connected to ground. Alternatively, the guard ring can be connected to the inverting input of the amplifier if the feedback impedance and source impedance to the amplifier are relatively low. A third option is to connect the guard ring to the non-inverting input of the amplifier, provided this pin is connected to a low impedance voltage source.

In both circuits described here, the underlying cause of the problem was an impedance mismatch. Once this is understood, the solutions, including guard rings, can be used to good effect.

For more information contact Avnet Kopp, 011 809 6100, Memec SA, 011 897 8600 or Tempe Technologies, 011 452 0530.



Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

New Studio 6 SDK
Design Automation
New Simplicity Studio 6 SDK opens development environment, and opens developers to Series 3.

Read more...
New camera module targets AI and computer vision
Vepac Electronics Design Automation
Innodisk has announced its shift towards the AI industry with half of its AI development related to image recognition.

Read more...
Engineering the future of automation
Design Automation
As the next great leap forward in mechanisation, industrial automation integrates data into the manufacturing equation through high-input sensors and sensor infrastructures.

Read more...
Fusion 360 gains Ultra Librarian electronics CAD library
Design Automation
Autodesk collaborated with Ultra Librarian to generate this Fusion 360-compatible app that provides users with free verified schematic symbols, PCB footprints, 3D STEP models, and reference designs.

Read more...
ST releases new reference designs for STM32
Altron Arrow Design Automation
ST Microelectronics has released reference designs for the STM32WL5x and STM32WLEx, allowing new applications to be quickly prototyped.

Read more...
TI releases top five power design tools
Altron Arrow Design Automation
Texas Instruments has released an online resource combining the top five power design tools available to aid in the next electronic project design.

Read more...
Find tools and help more easily on Mouser’s website
Design Automation
The Services and Tools page and Help Centre give customers the ability to view and track orders, request technical support and data sheets, and place orders.

Read more...
Upgraded AI/ML SDK for PolarFire FPGAs
Altron Arrow Design Automation
Network sizes have been reduced by 50% by optimising containers for weights and the built-in bit accuracy simulator’s speed has been tripled.

Read more...
Mouser’s resource pages make it easier to find what you need
TRX Electronics Design Automation
Mouser Electronics offers a wealth of customer-focused online tools to simplify and optimise the selection and purchasing process. Helping customers to easily browse, select and purchase products, the ...

Read more...
Software development kit for motor control
Altron Arrow Design Automation
STMicroelectronics’ STM32 microcontrollers offer the performance of industry-standard Arm Cortex-M cores running either vector control or field-oriented control (FOC) modes, which are widely used in high-performance ...

Read more...