Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi to everybody,
I need to obtain a capacitor in a PCB single sided. Does anybody has a formula to calculate the lenght, the width and the shape of it? I'm working around 13 MHz (=13000000 Hz...) Thanks Massimo |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 16:09:11 +0100, "Massi"
wrote: Hi to everybody, I need to obtain a capacitor in a PCB single sided. Does anybody has a formula to calculate the lenght, the width and the shape of it? I'm working around 13 MHz (=13000000 Hz...) Thanks Massimo Hi Massimo, 1mm X 1mm square would work quite well at 13MHz. So would 1M X 1M. How well either works is wholly dependant upon what you intend to use it for. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Cb = K1*(er*eo*Thickness*length)/spacing.
Co = K2*eo*thickness*length/spacing er = relative permitivity of board material K1 = percentage of E field in dielectric material ~ 30% - 40% K2 = percentage of E field in air ~ 70% - 60% eo = relative permitivity of air thickness = thickness of copper cladding length = length of parallel paths spacing = spacing between parallel paths. Note: there are two capacitors in a single layer PCB. The path through air and the path through the board material. You sum the total of both capacitances. er for most boards is between 2 and 4. Design your initial capacitor on a sample board and refine the K1, K2 and er terms. DD Massi wrote: Hi to everybody, I need to obtain a capacitor in a PCB single sided. Does anybody has a formula to calculate the lenght, the width and the shape of it? I'm working around 13 MHz (=13000000 Hz...) Thanks Massimo |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dave Shrader" ha scritto nel messaggio news:9qwWb.148648$U%5.678050@attbi_s03... Cb = K1*(er*eo*Thickness*length)/spacing. Co = K2*eo*thickness*length/spacing er = relative permitivity of board material K1 = percentage of E field in dielectric material ~ 30% - 40% K2 = percentage of E field in air ~ 70% - 60% eo = relative permitivity of air thickness = thickness of copper cladding length = length of parallel paths spacing = spacing between parallel paths. Note: there are two capacitors in a single layer PCB. The path through air and the path through the board material. You sum the total of both capacitances. er for most boards is between 2 and 4. Design your initial capacitor on a sample board and refine the K1, K2 and er terms. DD Thankx Dave, I'll try. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I know there are some pretty good PCB-capacitor aplets on the web.
Try a Google or similar search for them. "RFSim99" is free for the downloading and has lots of tools, including a component calculator that covers, among other components, capacitors. It lets you just select FR4 dielectric (or any of several others, or your specific relative dielectric constant), thickness, and plate area, and will tell you the capacitance. Beware of fringing effects, though, if your capacitor plate dimensions are not large compared with the board thickness. RFSim99 doesn't do anything to account for fringing as far as I can see. The capacitance is mainly dependent on the plate area, but beware also of making one that is long and narrow, because it will act like a transmission line. Also, a problem with FR4 is that the dielectric constant is not well controlled, so the capacitance may not be very consistent from manufacturer to manufacturer. Cheers, Tom "Massi" wrote in message ... Hi to everybody, I need to obtain a capacitor in a PCB single sided. Does anybody has a formula to calculate the lenght, the width and the shape of it? I'm working around 13 MHz (=13000000 Hz...) Thanks Massimo |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tom Bruhns" ha scritto nel messaggio
m... I know there are some pretty good PCB-capacitor aplets on the web. Try a Google or similar search for them. "RFSim99" is free for the downloading and has lots of tools, including a component calculator that covers, among other components, capacitors. It lets you just select FR4 dielectric (or any of several others, or your specific relative dielectric constant), thickness, and plate area, and will tell you the capacitance. Beware of fringing effects, though, if your capacitor plate dimensions are not large compared with the board thickness. RFSim99 doesn't do anything to account for fringing as far as I can see. The capacitance is mainly dependent on the plate area, but beware also of making one that is long and narrow, because it will act like a transmission line. Also, a problem with FR4 is that the dielectric constant is not well controlled, so the capacitance may not be very consistent from manufacturer to manufacturer. Fantastic, bellissimo, thankx Massimo |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|