SPRACU1A October   2020  – June 2021 AM2431 , AM2432 , AM2434 , AM6411 , AM6412 , AM6421 , AM6441 , AM6442

 

  1.   Trademarks
  2. 1Overview
    1. 1.1 Board Designs Supported
    2. 1.2 General Board Layout Guidelines
    3. 1.3 PCB Stack-Up
    4. 1.4 Bypass Capacitors
      1. 1.4.1 Bulk Bypass Capacitors
      2. 1.4.2 High-Speed Bypass Capacitors
      3. 1.4.3 Return Current Bypass Capacitors
    5. 1.5 Velocity Compensation
  3. 2DDR4 Board Design and Layout Guidance
    1. 2.1  DDR4 Introduction
    2. 2.2  DDR4 Device Implementations Supported
    3. 2.3  DDR4 Interface Schematics
      1. 2.3.1 DDR4 Implementation Using 16-Bit SDRAM Devices
      2. 2.3.2 DDR4 Implementation Using 8-Bit SDRAM Devices
    4. 2.4  Compatible JEDEC DDR4 Devices
    5. 2.5  Placement
    6. 2.6  DDR4 Keepout Region
    7. 2.7  VPP
    8. 2.8  Net Classes
    9. 2.9  DDR4 Signal Termination
    10. 2.10 VREF Routing
    11. 2.11 VTT
    12. 2.12 POD Interconnect
    13. 2.13 CK and ADDR_CTRL Topologies and Routing Guidance
    14. 2.14 Data Group Topologies and Routing Guidance
    15. 2.15 CK and ADDR_CTRL Routing Specification
      1. 2.15.1 CACLM - Clock Address Control Longest Manhattan Distance
      2. 2.15.2 CK and ADDR_CTRL Routing Limits
    16. 2.16 Data Group Routing Specification
      1. 2.16.1 DQLM - DQ Longest Manhattan Distance
      2. 2.16.2 Data Group Routing Limits
    17. 2.17 Bit Swapping
      1. 2.17.1 Data Bit Swapping
      2. 2.17.2 Address and Control Bit Swapping
  4. 3LPDDR4 Board Design and Layout Guidance
    1. 3.1  LPDDR4 Introduction
    2. 3.2  LPDDR4 Device Implementations Supported
    3. 3.3  LPDDR4 Interface Schematics
    4. 3.4  Compatible JEDEC LPDDR4 Devices
    5. 3.5  Placement
    6. 3.6  LPDDR4 Keepout Region
    7. 3.7  Net Classes
    8. 3.8  LPDDR4 Signal Termination
    9. 3.9  LPDDR4 VREF Routing
    10. 3.10 LPDDR4 VTT
    11. 3.11 CK and ADDR_CTRL Topologies
    12. 3.12 Data Group Topologies
    13. 3.13 CK and ADDR_CTRL Routing Specification
    14. 3.14 Data Group Routing Specification
    15. 3.15 Channel, Byte, and Bit Swapping
  5. 4Revision History

DDR4 Keepout Region

The region of the PCB used for DDR4 circuitry must be isolated from other signals. The DDR4 keepout region is defined for this purpose and is shown in Figure 2-4. The size of this region varies with the placement and DDR routing. Non-DDR4 signals should not be routed on the DDR signal layers within the DDR4 keepout region. Non-DDR4 signals may be routed in this region only if they are routed on other layers separated from the DDR signal layers by a ground layer. No breaks are allowed in the reference ground layers in this region. In addition, a solid VDDS_DDR power plane should exist across the entire keepout region.

GUID-20200903-CA0I-RL6V-NVJK-CD1KWGMFMPKC-low.gif Figure 2-4 DDR4 Keepout Region