Taking a Modular PCB Design Approach in Altium Designer

Zachariah Peterson
|  Created: March 19, 2021

PCB design is rarely discussed in terms of designing functional blocks or as connecting modules with different functionality. Simple designs can usually be designed without considering how your PCB layout affects the operation and interaction between multiple functional blocks in your board. With more complex designs, you’ll need to consider more than just the high-level overview of your board when you are designing a complex system.

Modular PCB design is one design methodology that is implicitly used when designing PCBs for a variety of applications. Embedded systems, multi-board systems, mixed-signal systems, and other boards with diverse functionality can all benefit from this design methodology. New designers would do well to learn anything they can about modular PCB design.

When you take your first dive into modular PCB design, you’ll quickly find that your design tools may not be able to keep up due to a lack of unification, inconsistent data formats across design tools, and unnecessary repetition of basic design steps in different tools. Design software is finally catching up to the demands of modular design, and PCB designers can finally access design platforms packages that are uniquely adaptable to modular PCB design.

ALTIUM DESIGNER®

A unified PCB design package with the most adaptable set of design tools in the industry.

In the past, PCB design treated each portion of an overall electronic system individually. The links between different portions of the system were seldom considered except by designers creating the most complex boards. Some examples include computer architecture and peripherals, embedded systems for military and aerospace, and other complex multi-board systems.

Now that electronics in all sectors of the market are becoming smarter and connected, consumers are demanding greater functionality from electronic products. PCB designers need to think in new ways in order to integrate all this functionality into a single device. Modular PCB design is one design approach that takes a hierarchical view of an electronic system, whether it be a rigid-flex, multi-board, mixed-signal, or another system.

Design software that operates with a consistent, unified interface and a single data model is uniquely capable of being adapted to modular PCB design. This allows you to define a rigorous hierarchy for your system and quickly implement it in your next device. With this in mind, let’s take a look at the modular PCB design process and how you can take a hierarchical approach to designing complex systems.

The Modular PCB Design Process

Thinking about modular design requires looking at your device in terms of its separate functionality. This is by far the easiest when you start with a functional block diagram of your device. You want to start with a high-level view of how different portions of your device work together to produce the key features you need. You’ll need to consider inputs and the desired outputs in your functional block diagram.

In cases where your device will contain some central processing, you’ll need to consider this as part of the overall design process. This is about more than just creating a block diagram; you may need to make changes to your design later when you start laying out your board if you do not consider this early. Many designers will start immediately laying out their board around some central component without thinking about the relationships between functional blocks in the system.

Once you are ready to drill down to a more granular level of your board’s functionality, you may want to create finer block diagrams that show how each portion of your device functions. In other words, you want to take a hierarchical approach to designing your board’s key features.

Using Schematics for Modular Design

Creating schematics is your first step to taking your board off the back of a napkin and into your design software. When it comes to modular design, you can get a head start on schematic design when you design connections between components within each functional block in your block diagram. This gives you a head start on designing each PCB schematic and gives you a useful reference once you start designing each circuit.

Schematics can be linked together using a hierarchical schematic editor that is uniquely tailored to printed circuit design. This allows you to define parent-child relationships between multiple schematics. This also helps you stay organized throughout the design process and allows you to remain focused on one portion of your design at a time. You can then link multiple schematics together within a higher level parent schematic, similar to the way you would in a functional block diagram.

Hierarchical, multi-board design in Altium Designer

Hierarchical, multi-board design for printed circuit layout

In many systems, you will reuse certain portions of your design, and there is no reason to continually redesign portions of your board in different schematics. This is where multichannel design becomes critical. This design methodology allows you to easily reuse portions of your design in different schematics. You won’t have to re-add and rearrange the same components multiple times in your schematics.

Once you have defined parent-child relationships between schematics and completely translated your functional block diagram into a set of hierarchical schematics, it’s time to transition to the PCB layout phase. You’ll need to capture your schematics as initial layouts on a new board with a schematic capture tool. Once you have captured your components and connections on an initial board, it’s time to start arranging and routing components.

If you’re creating a multi-board system, this design process is naturally adaptable to multi-board design. Each functional block or multiple functional blocks can be integrated into different boards, making schematic capture to each board much easier.

Schematic of the PCB schematic editor in Altium Designer

Schematic design as part of the modular PCB design process

Modular PCB Design: The Layout Phase

Once you import your schematics as an initial layout, it’s time to start arranging components around your board. The right schematic capture tool will maintain the organization you defined in your schematic and will show you the connections between components as part of your schematic.

Some boards will need to have functionality that is separated into different portions of your board or literally onto different boards in the case of a multi-board system. For example, mixed-signal systems should be designed so that the digital and analog sections form their own functional blocks, and each block will need to be separated into its own areas in the board to preserve signal integrity.

Once you add even more functionality, such as a Wi-Fi module for wireless communication, it should also sit in its own functional block and may even need its own schematic. You’ll want to assign each type of functionality to its own area of your board to preserve signal integrity and ensure that your device operates as intended.

In the realm of computer architecture, for example, multi-board systems separate important functionality into different blocks in order to provide different functions while meeting specific industry standards on design and functionality. This is just one area where a modular design approach is indispensable.

Modular PCB Design Software

PCB design software for modular design requires a number of functions that other design platforms simply can’t offer. Your modular design software needs to include hierarchical, multi-channel schematic editing tools to separate the key features of your system into functional blocks. You’ll operate at your highest productivity when your design software includes a schematic capture tool alongside your schematic editor.

Component management is another important part of modular PCB design. When working with multichannel design, you’ll be reusing plenty of components in different locations throughout your board. This means you’ll need a component library that integrates with all of your design features using a unified component data model.

Integrating these features into a single interface allows you to easily generate initial layouts and start arranging components throughout your system. Your layout editor should also allow you to group components into groups in your layout, making it easy to rearrange components in your system as needed. This helps you stay organized and correct layout errors before you move on to manufacturing.

Screenshot of the Manufacturer Part Search window in Altium Designer

Component manufacturer search tools integrated with your schematic editor in Altium Designer

Software-aided Modular PCB Design Applications

There are plenty of applications that can inspire your next design and will benefit from a modular design approach. Computer architecture is one area that has long used a modular design approach, albeit across different companies throughout the industry. With more consumer-level products including sophisticated functionality and providing connectivity, taking a modular approach with the right design software will help you successfully design for these applications.

Products like wearable medical devices, smartphones, entertainment systems, home automation systems, and connected automobiles are embedded systems that naturally apply a modular design approach. Many devices in these areas are actually multi-board systems that require sophisticated design tools to help you create a functional design and prepare it for delivery to your PCB manufacturer.

While modular design software includes broad functionality, it doesn’t need to make the modular design process complicated. When these tools are integrated into a single program, the modular design process will be much easier and can proceed quickly. Instead of separating tools into separate programs like other PCB design software companies, your design software should contain the tools you need to create comprehensive systems using any design methodology, including modular design.

Modular Design in a Unified Environment

Working in an environment that unifies your design features gives you access to more than just sophisticated schematic and layout editing tools. The integrated design environment in Altium Designer operates using a single rules-driven design engine and a single data model for your components and board. This allows features like simulators, data management, and documentation tools to instantly access your design data as you prepare for manufacturing.

Simulation is an important part of modular design as you’ll need to verify important aspects of your power distribution network, crosstalk, and EMI suppression. Working with an integrated design platform allows your design data to be passed directly to your simulation tools. You won’t have to export your design to another program. This also allows you to limit your simulations to specific functional blocks within your system.

Working with a rules-driven design ensures that your design features will instantly check your schematic and layout choices against your design rules. As part of modular design, you’ll need to make sure that each functional block in your design will operate as expected and that it meets basic design standards.

Screenshot of the Design Rules Checker window in Altium Designer

Interactive design rules checking in Altium Designer

Altium Designer is the only design software that integrates all these features and more into a single, unified design environment governed by a rules-driven design engine. This ensures your tools are naturally adaptable to modular PCB design and integrates these tools into a single design environment. You’ll have the power you need to design to any application with Altium Designer.

Modular PCB design requires visualizing your designs in a new way, and your PCB design software needs to keep pace with new design methodologies. Altium Designer is the only software package that is uniquely adaptable to any design technique and application. Once you use Altium Designer, it will be the last PCB design software package you’ll ever need, and you’ll have the tools you need to stay at the forefront of new technology.

Using the integrated design interface in Altium Designer for modular PCB design might seem daunting, but Altium offers plenty of resources to help you reach success. With instant access to the AltiumLive forum, podcasts, and webinars given by industry experts, design tutorials, and an extensive knowledge base, you can rest assured you have the tools you need for any design. No other PCB design software company gives you access to this many resources.

Only Altium Designer places all the design, simulation, verification, and documentation tools you need into a single program with a consistent interface. Instead of using an outdated workflow in other design software platforms, try working in the only design environment that is uniquely adaptable to any design methodology. You can stay at the forefront of modular PCB design when you use Altium Designer.

About Author

About Author

Zachariah Peterson has an extensive technical background in academia and industry. He currently provides research, design, and marketing services to companies in the electronics industry. Prior to working in the PCB industry, he taught at Portland State University and conducted research on random laser theory, materials, and stability. His background in scientific research spans topics in nanoparticle lasers, electronic and optoelectronic semiconductor devices, environmental sensors, and stochastics. His work has been published in over a dozen peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings, and he has written 2500+ technical articles on PCB design for a number of companies. He is a member of IEEE Photonics Society, IEEE Electronics Packaging Society, American Physical Society, and the Printed Circuit Engineering Association (PCEA). He previously served as a voting member on the INCITS Quantum Computing Technical Advisory Committee working on technical standards for quantum electronics, and he currently serves on the IEEE P3186 Working Group focused on Port Interface Representing Photonic Signals Using SPICE-class Circuit Simulators.

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