Electronic – GND plane and reference potential

circuit-designmicrowavepcbpcb-antennaRF

I have seen that most of RF printed board circuits have a GND plane which is connected to the power supply ground terminal and serves as a return path for current from different components on the board.

Something like this:

enter image description here

What I have seen in many datasheet is also that this plane is assumed as reference potential for the output ports and indicated with the symbol:

enter image description here

like the classical GND terminal of an Op – Amp or other simple circuit.

What I do not understand is: How can be this plane represented by a single node?
How can it be a reference voltage?

At high frequencies it is a transmission line, so its voltage will have some spatial oscillation, so it will not have a constant voltage. How can it be considered a reference potential for output ports?

Best Answer

Everything about transmission line theory is a useful approximation, not a detailed description of physical reality.

When transmission line effects are important, it's only an approximation to assign a scalar potential to any point in the circuit. Whether on the transmission line, on the ground plane, or at the terminations. Nonetheless we approximately define the scalar potential, and we find this is useful for predicting the circuit behavior at a high level.

In the microstrip transmission line, the actual behavior comes from the electromagnetic wave travelling between, and (approximately) confined by the boundary structure formed by the ground plane and the trace. We can define an (approximate) potential at each axial location along the line by the integral between the ground plane and the line (along the shortest possible path) at that axial location.

It isn't important whether the potential varies between different points on the ground plane or whether the potential varies between different points along the trace. It's only important that the (approximately defined) potential difference between the trace and the ground plane varies along the length of the line. Since this is all that matters, it's useful to assume that the ground plane remains an equipotential and that all the potential changes happen on the trace.

From experience we know that this approximation is close enough to reality to allow us to predict the circuit behavior as observed at the terminations of the transmission line reasonably accurately.

In summary: You are correct that in a high-speed circuit there will be potential variation between points on the ground plane. Nonetheless we make a useful approximation and assume the ground plane is at a uniform potential and we find this approximation is useful for predicting circuit behavior.

Related Topic