Designing a high-frequency PCB for RF applications demands attention to details that simply do not matter at lower frequencies. At GHz speeds, every trace becomes a transmission line, every via adds inductance, and improper grounding creates antenna-like radiation. This guide covers the essential layout practices for reliable RF PCB design.
Table of Contents
- RF PCB Basics
- Impedance Control
- Layer Stackup Design
- Ground Plane Integrity
- RF Trace Routing
- Via Stitching and Shielding
- Material Selection
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
RF PCB Basics
At frequencies above 100 MHz, electromagnetic effects dominate circuit behaviour. Traces act as transmission lines, parasitic capacitance and inductance become significant, and signal integrity depends on controlled impedance paths. Common RF applications include WiFi/Bluetooth modules (2.4/5 GHz), LoRa radios (868 MHz), GPS receivers (1.575 GHz), and cellular modems.
Impedance Control
RF traces must maintain a specific characteristic impedance (usually 50 ohms) to minimise signal reflections. Impedance depends on trace width, dielectric thickness, and substrate material. Use an online impedance calculator (Saturn PCB toolkit is free) to determine trace dimensions for your stackup.
For standard FR4 with 1mm dielectric thickness and 50-ohm impedance: microstrip trace width is approximately 1.8mm on the surface layer.
Layer Stackup Design
A minimum 4-layer stackup is recommended for RF designs:
- Layer 1: Signal + RF traces (controlled impedance)
- Layer 2: Continuous ground plane (most critical layer)
- Layer 3: Power plane
- Layer 4: Signal routing
The ground plane directly below RF traces must be uninterrupted. Any split or gap in the ground plane beneath an RF trace destroys impedance control.
Ground Plane Integrity
- Keep the ground plane continuous under all RF traces — no slots, splits, or via voids
- Ground pour on both sides of the board, connected with via stitching
- Place decoupling caps close to IC power pins with short return paths to ground
- Use separate analog and digital ground regions, connected at a single point near the power supply
RF Trace Routing
- Keep RF traces as short as possible — every millimetre adds loss
- Avoid bends: Use gentle curves instead of right angles. If bends are necessary, use 45-degree chamfered corners
- No stubs: Unterminated trace stubs create reflections. Route RF traces point-to-point
- Separation: Keep RF traces at least 3x their width away from other traces and edges
- Matched lengths: For differential pairs (USB, LVDS), match trace lengths to within 0.1mm
Via Stitching and Shielding
Via stitching connects ground planes on different layers with a grid of vias around RF sections:
- Place ground vias every lambda/20 (wavelength/20) around RF traces and components
- Create via fences around sensitive RF blocks to contain emissions
- Use via-in-pad for RF component grounding (requires manufacturer support)
Material Selection
Standard FR4 works up to about 3 GHz. For higher frequencies:
- Rogers RO4003C: Low loss, stable Dk=3.38, good for 5 GHz+ designs
- Isola I-Tera: Mid-range option between FR4 and Rogers
- FR4 high-Tg: Acceptable for WiFi/Bluetooth (2.4 GHz) if cost is the primary concern
Rogers materials cost 5-10x more than FR4 but are essential for GPS, 5G, and radar applications.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I design WiFi antennas on FR4?
Yes, PCB antennas for 2.4 GHz WiFi work well on standard FR4. Many ESP32 modules use on-board FR4 antennas. For 5 GHz and above, consider lower-loss materials.
Is 2-layer PCB acceptable for RF?
For simple designs at 2.4 GHz (like ESP32 breakouts), 2-layer with a solid ground plane on the bottom layer works. For complex RF designs, 4-layer is strongly recommended.
How do I test RF PCB performance?
A VNA (Vector Network Analyser) measures impedance, return loss, and insertion loss. Budget VNAs like the NanoVNA cost ₹3,000-5,000 and work up to 3 GHz.
Conclusion
High-frequency PCB design requires disciplined attention to impedance control, ground plane integrity, and proper via placement. Start with simpler RF designs (2.4 GHz modules with manufacturer reference layouts) and gradually tackle more complex designs as your understanding of electromagnetic behaviour grows.
Explore RF-capable development boards in our Waveshare and Arduino collections.
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