High-speed designs today have multiple high-speed interfaces, and these interfaces have different impedance requirements in the same system. For example: PCIe interface is designed for 85 ohms whereas Gigabit ethernet is designed for 100 ohms. Sometimes due to stack-up cross-sectional restrictions and fixed dielectric constant of the material, it is not easy to meet all characteristic impedance requirements in the design. Design trade-off needs to be performed to analyze which interface is sensitive to impedance variations. With signal speeds going above 100 Gbps, pulse amplitude modulation-4 (PAM4) has become more common and PAM4 signaling is more sensitive to impedance variations due to low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).In this paper, the impact of channel impedance on 100 Gbps ethernet (802.3ck) interface is analyzed using time-domain and frequency domain analysis. Channel operating margin (COM) analysis is performed for various channel impedances on an 802.3ck-CR topology. It Is found that huge impedance mismatch between the trace breakout and channel impacts channel performance adversely.
Nicolette Driscoll, Andrew G. Richardson, Kathleen Maleski, Babak Anasori, Dayo O. Adewole, Pavel Lelyukh, Lilia Escobedo, D. Kacy Cullen, Timothy H. Lucas, Yury Gogotsi, Flavia Vitale
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