Signal integrity is the practice of ensuring sufficient fidelity of a digital signal transmitted between a transmitter and a receiver for proper functioning of the circuit. The integrity of a signal in real-world applications is compromised by artifacts of the layout of the circuits on a printed circuit board, the type of IC package being used, and is impacted by the circuit logic family, power delivery network, and other aspects of high-speed digital design. These non-ideal, real-world effects can lead to severely distorted signal waveforms, and result in faulty switching and logic errors. Power integrity is the design of the power distribution network necessary to deliver the DC and dynamic current to high-speed switching devices, while meeting voltage droop and ripple specifications that can impact signal integrity, and is also considered.
The course will be delivered as a set of self-contained modules covering the topics of:
- overview and trends of signal integrity (SI) and power integrity (PI) engineering for electronic design, and relation to electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) engineering
- transmission lines and signal propagation in the time and frequency domains, including basic principles, characteristics of complex discontinuities, as well as conductor and dielectric losses that impact high-speed propagation
- signal spectra and basic spectral properties of data signals, NRZ and PAM4
- network and S-parameters
- signal propagation on single-ended as well as differential lines including self and mutual inductance and capacitance concepts and crosstalk, 2D cross-sectional analysis tools
- link path/channel analysis, and the impact of discontinuities and non-ideal effects
- VNA measurements – S-parameters and TDR
- power distribution network analysis including charge delivery and noise voltage, target impedance, PDN impedance, and design methodologies
Dates, Times and Delivery
The Signal and Power Integrity: Foundations and Practical Guidelines (online) course will be delivered in eight sessions, each comprising 2 hours of teaching and up to 30 minutes of Q&A.
The course will run from 29 April - 14 May 2025, with sessions delivered over Microsoft Teams at 15:00 - 17:30 (UK time) on:
- Tuesday 29 April 2025
- Wednesday 30 April 2025
- Friday 2 May 2025
- Tuesday 6 May 2025
- Wednesday 7 May 2025
- Friday 9 May 2025
- Tuesday 13 May 2025
- Wednesday 14 May 2025
A world clock, and time zone converter can be found here: https://bit.ly/3bSPu6D
This is a ‘virtual classroom’ course.
To replicate the experience of a classroom, the sessions are ‘live’ and are not recorded.
No in-person attendance at Oxford is required and you do not need to purchase any software.