I'm routing a 4 layer board with a USB2.0 differential pair.
The application note has an example stackup for a 4 layer FR-4 board as shown below (top image). The example includes trace width and spacing for a 90Ω differential pair.
When I enter these parameters into either of the calculators I have, they both give the same result of about 103Ω, also shown below.
Both calculators I have show the stackup as a 2 layer board, however I would think (perhaps incorrectly) that additional layers below what is shown would have minimal impact on the impedance of the traces above the ground plane, but perhaps this is a faulty assumption?
Can anyone explain the 90Ω vs. 103Ω discrepancy?
If the discrepancy is as a result of the 4 layers stackup vs. the 2 layer stackup shown in the calculator, does anyone have a link to a calculator where I can enter all the required parameters for a board as shown in the top image?
It's unclear how the 4 layer stackup should be related to the impedance calculation because there's no ground plane in the 4-layer stackup. What's your intended transmission line design for the USB?
In most cases, you'll probably decide for a microstrip with a ground plane on the layer below. USB has by the way also a (rather loose) specification for the common mode impedance because it's using single ended signalling.
It's unclear how the 4 layer stackup should be related to the impedance calculation because there's no ground plane in the 4-layer stackup. What's your intended transmission line design for the USB?
In most cases, you'll probably decide for a microstrip with a ground plane on the layer below. USB has by the way also a (rather loose) specification for the common mode impedance because it's using single ended signalling.
Sorry, clear in my mind, but not in the information posted. Midlayer 1 will be ground, and Midlayer 2 will be Vcc, top and bottom are signal layers, and the USB signals will be very short ~4mm on the top only (the connector is adjacent to the driver).
One difference between the two calculators is that the coupled (differential) line calculator does not include metal thickness. When metal thickness is included, line impedance goes down.
It goes down even more if you include solder resist, and that might be the difference between your 90 Ohm from the appnote and the calculated 103 Ohm.
According to my tools, surface coating make the biggest difference for the shown geometry, metal thickness only to a small extent.
In real life, varying substrate height, etching tolerances and loosely defined FR4 Er will have the strongest impact. But fortunately, USB impedance isn't too critical.