Electronic – What does “50 ohm system” mean

digital-communicationslayoutspitrace

I'm looking to use the following switch to switch an SPI bus ( CLK <= 2Mhz) between two different devices.

I'm reading the datasheet to see if the the frequency of the signals are going to be ok, and I'm not sure I quite understand the High Frequency Performance section (Pg 9 of the datasheet)

In 50Ω systems, signal response is reasonably flat up
to 50MHz (see Typical Operating Characteristics).
Above 20MHz, the on-response has several minor
peaks that are highly layout dependent. The problem is
not turning the switch on, but turning it off. The off-state
switch acts like a capacitor and passes higher frequencies
with less attenuation. At 10MHz, off-isolation is
about -50dB in 50Ω systems, becoming worse (approximately
20dB per decade) as frequency increases.
Higher circuit impedances also degrade off-isolation.
Adjacent channel attenuation is about 3dB above that
of a bare IC socket and is entirely due to capacitive
coupling.

What would be considered to be a 50ohm system ? Is this referencing to the trace impedance ? Would SPI communication lines be considered 50ohm ?

Best Answer

What this language is telling you is that these devices can be used in distributed impedance systems. There are two rough areas of analysis, lumped and distributed. Distributed system use the wave equation to describe them, are typically built using waveguides, coax and strip lines etc. and operate with characteristic impedances. Lumped systems are modelled as collections of R,C and L's. There is also a division between high frequency and low frequency ( and those cut offs have different meanings to different people) but around 10's of MHz is normal for the lumped vs. distributed model. Low speed being the domain of lumped ...

Basically those parts can be used to switch high speed signals using coax etc. that means you're safe to use them at your slower speeds. You might be paying for performance you don't use but it will work nevertheless. At the slower speeds you won't need to worry about 50 Ohm termination and reflections etc.