Electronic – Tying ground planes together with a non-zero Resistor

emcgroundpcb

I was reviewing the schematic of a motor driver board and noticed that the digital and analog grounds are tied together with a 3.9 ohm 1/4 watt resistor. I am still trying to find the gerber files to see how the ground plains are laid out, but does anyone know why this would be done instead of using a 0-ohm resistor or just connecting them in the copper?

My first thought was that it was an attempt at some sort of noise suppression but this doesn't seem like something that would be very effective at doing that. Feel free to speculate, because for now I'm at a loss.

EDIT: The analog ground feeds back to a 24V supply off the board and the digital ground feeds back to a 5V supply off the board. At each of the power connectors there are several decoupling capacitors. However the resistor is by noneof the connectors and the respective capacitors.

Best Answer

It could be that a shorted resistor would be equally good as a 3R9 resistor or it may not. There are a few things to consider. Firstly, does the analogue circuit make an external ground connection. If it does and so does the digital side then putting a resistor in to bridge the two planes makes sense because digital currents in the digital plane will be less inclined to take the more arduous route thru the analogue plane. This reduces the likelihood of analogue noise pick up due to digital current: -

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If the 3.9 ohm resistor were shorted out there will be a possibility of some digital current from [A] passing onto the analogue ground plane and passing through a sensitive area [B] before returning to the correct grounding point. With a 3R9 present, the digital current will be reduced because it will be more inclined to take the "easier" route to the power grounding point. Because also the resistor is leaded, it will have a significant inductance that might help this. Consider also that the 3R9 resistor may actually be an inductor and that the OP has misread what it is. Easy to do on some inductors.

There could be other reasons but I'm less inclined to speculate because I could be incorrect. Maybe supply pictures and a schematic.