Routing Rule Changes for Thicker Printed Circuit Boards

Versal Adaptive SoC PCB Design User Guide (UG863)

Document ID
UG863
Release Date
2024-04-01
Revision
1.8 English

The DDR4 routing rules provided in this chapter allow for the interface to run at the maximum supported data rates as specified in the Versal adaptive SoC data sheets while also assuming a maximum board thickness of 131 mils. For boards thicker than 131 mils, the maximum interface speed might need to be adjusted downward. See the following table for maximum memory data rates per board thickness.

Table 1. DDR4 Maximum Data Rates per Board Thickness
Component Board Thickness (mil)
DDR4 ≤100 101–145 101–145 + Stub-free 1 145–275
Component See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets Two memory speed grades lower from data rates in Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets Three memory speed grades lower from data rates in Versal adaptive SoC data sheets
1-Rank DIMM See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets One memory speed grades lower from data rates in Versal adaptive SoC data sheets
2-Rank DIMM See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets One memory speed grades lower from data rates in Versal adaptive SoC data sheets
4-Rank DIMM See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets See Versal adaptive SoC data sheets One memory speed grades lower from data rates in Versal adaptive SoC data sheets
  1. Stub-free refers to alternating the routing of the signals between upper and lower layers such that long via stubs are avoided. See Figure 2 as an example of alternate layer routing as compared to conventional routing shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1. Conventional Routing
Figure 2. Stub-Free Routing