Board designers are faced with a unique task when designing a power distribution system (PDS) for a Xilinx® device. Most other large, dense integrated circuits (such as large microprocessors) come with very specific bypass capacitor requirements. Because these devices are designed only to implement specific tasks in their hardened silicon architecture, their power supply demands are fixed and fluctuate typically within a certain range.
Xilinx devices do not share this property. Devices can implement an almost infinite number of applications at user-determined frequencies, and in multiple clock domains.
For this reason, it is critical that you understand the power requirements of the design, which you can assess by completing a power estimation using the Xilinx Power Estimator (XPE) or Power Design Manager (PDM) tool (download at www.xilinx.com/power). Also refer to the PCB Design Guide for your device to fully understand the PDS placement and generic decoupling requirements prior to a power estimation.
Key factors to consider during PDS design include:
- Selecting the right voltage regulators to meet the noise and current
requirements based on power estimation. For
more information, see this link in the
Versal ACAP System Integration and Validation Methodology
Guide (UG1388).
Note: To enable and simplify your power design, Xilinx partners with key power vendors to design, build, document, and test reference designs that meet all power requirements. For more information, see the Power Delivery Solutions tab on the Power page of the Xilinx website.
- Consolidating power.
In the XPE or PDM tool, you can select between Full
Power Management or Minimum Power Rails using the Solution selection on the
Power Design sheet.
Power Tip: Xilinx recommends adding a shunt resistor to allow the power on each rail to be monitored. Alternatively, you can use a PMBus-enabled regulator or current monitoring integrated circuit (IC).
- Setting up the Sysmon power supply (VCCAUX_SMON).
- Running power distribution network (PDN) simulation.
Use the
recommended number of decoupling capacitors shown in the XPE or PDM Power Design sheet. These numbers are based
on initial assumptions for step load per rail. However, you can edit the numbers
to reflect your individual design to get more accurate requirements.
Running PDN simulations can help to confirm the exact amount of decoupling
capacitors required to guarantee power supplies that are within the recommended
operating range.
Note: Be sure to follow the capacitor placement shown in the Versal ACAP PCB Design User Guide (UG863).
For more information on PDN simulation, see Simulating FPGA Power Integrity Using S-Parameter Models (WP411).
report_power
command can analyze power on a per regulator or voltage
regulator module (VRM) basis to ensure the required current on each rail does not exceed
the intended power delivery system. For more
information, see this link in the
Versal ACAP System Integration and Validation Methodology
Guide (UG1388).