| MONDAY | |
| 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. |
CPCD. Certified Printed Circuit Designer Training
Speaker: Stephen V. Chavez, Siemens
The PCEA CPCD course covers approximately 70 major topics under the following headings:
This special 20-hour version of the curriculum is offered in conjunction with PCB West. Registration includes the 400-page Printed Circuit Design Professional Handbook, developed by leading experts in printed circuit engineering and layout with a combined 250+ years of industry experience. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
M1. PCB Management Forum
Join an A-list of experts as we take a deep look at managing distribution in times of rapid change, addressing the use of AI, new product introduction, global manufacturing and new facility engineering expansion. This special program is designed for upper-level management and directors. Who should attend: CEO/COO/CTO/VP/Executive Management/Director
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| 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
F1. IPC-2581 Consortium Meeting
Speaker: Hemant Shah, IPC-2581 Consortium
The IPC-2581 Consortium is a group of PCB design and supply chain companies whose collective goal is to enable, facilitate and drive the use of IPC-2581 in the industry. It is devoted to accelerating the adoption of IPC-2581 as an open, neutrally maintained global standard to encourage innovation, improve efficiency and reduce costs. Join the more than 140 member companies for this all-day free program for anyone interested in improving the bidirectional exchange of electronic data from design to manufacturing. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
1. Decoding Design Intent: Making Sense of Inputs to Achieve Better PCB Layouts
Speaker: Lauren Waslick and Kristen Aguiar, Newgrange Design
Designing a PCB when you are not involved in the schematic or mechanical development presents unique challenges. Recognizing these knowledge gaps early and addressing them proactively can greatly enhance the efficiency and quality of the final layout. This presentation will provide actionable strategies for designers to navigate the process of PCB layout from input review through generating final outputs. Key topics covered:
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
2. Effective Switch Mode Power Supply (SMPS) Design
Speaker: Keith Kowal, Applied Materia
Effective switch mode power supply (SMPS) design begins with understanding how PCB layout governs both performance and electromagnetic behavior. Designers often encounter excessive radiated and conducted noise, reduced efficiency, unstable regulation or complete startup failure. This course provides a practical framework for identifying the critical loops, understanding their switching behavior and applying layout techniques that ensure clean, predictable operation. Through a combination of topology fundamentals, real-world examples and best practice layout strategies, attendees will learn how to build SMPS designs that meet EMI requirements, achieve high efficiency, and operate reliably across a wide range of conditions. Topics to be covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
3. Part Placement Choices and Consequences
Speaker: Susy Webb, DesignScience
If a new board is connected physically but doesn’t work electrically or won’t interface correctly with the rest of its system, it may require costly, time-consuming redesign and retesting, meaning poor time-to-market for the product and loss of possible revenue for the company. There are many ways to place parts on any board, but some clearly work much better for the physics, electrical, mechanical and manufacturable purposes. The board engineer must understand all those things, and how they affect one another in order to know how to make good decisions for the board and so avoid any potential problems. This presentation will examine:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
4. Beyond the Layers: Advanced Techniques for PCB Stack-Up Design
Speaker: Troy Hopkins, Hopfinity Designs
A well-designed PCB stackup can significantly influence the performance and longevity of an electronic product. It affects signal integrity, power distribution, impedance control, thermal performance, and mechanical reliability. Conversely, a poorly chosen stackup can lead to issues such as crosstalk, electromagnetic interference (EMI), excessive heat generation, and reduced durability, resulting in higher production costs and increased time-to-market. By understanding the foundational principles of stackup design, designers can address these challenges early in the design process and ensure successful implementation.
What you will learn:
This presentation is ideal for PCB designers, engineers, and anyone involved in the development of electronic systems who seeks to enhance their expertise in stackup design. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator
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| 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
5. Circuit Grounding to Control Noise and EMI
Speaker: Rick Hartley, Rhartley Enterprises
When time-varying (AC) signals travel in the transmission lines of a PCB, state changing electric and magnetic fields are present. These fields, when not controlled, are the source of noise and EMI. ICs with very fast rise time outputs have made problems common, even in circuits clocked at low frequencies. Knowing all the basics of proper grounding, most of all high-quality PCB stackups, will help contain and control fields, making noise and EMI issues virtually nonexistent. Key topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
6. Signal Integrity in UHDI PCBs and IC Substrates
Speaker: Zachariah Peterson, Northwest Engineering Solutions
HDI and UHDI designs push the limits on layer thickness in conventional materials in PCBs and IC substrates. Thinner materials and additive processes (SAP/mSAP) have enabled much higher trace densities on thin layers, but the impacts on SI, PI, and EMI at high trace densities and in high-bandwidth channels are still being investigated. Due to the interplay between linewidth, allowable line spacing based on crosstalk, Dk value, channel bandwidth and layer thickness, it is important to understand how signal behavior is altered when designs are pushed into thinner materials. This presentation will show how thinner materials and their Dk values affect signal integrity, as well as what designers can do to hit SI targets by balancing Dk, copper roughness, and laminate thickness. These trends will be discussed in terms of HDI/UHDI PCBs, but the same trends are seen in IC substrates and substrate-like PCBs, and the implementation of those practices for more advanced PCBs will be discussed to illustrate how to support bandwidths reaching 56GHz. Topics to be presented:
Simulation examples from real designs will be presented to illustrate the design tradeoffs listed above, and implementation in real designs will be shown as examples. Designers will learn how to balance tradeoffs between Dk value, Df value, copper roughness and laminate thickness when selecting stackup materials based on the frequency range that is important in their systems. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Intermediate, Advanced |
| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
7. Getting It Right the First Time: Best Practices from Concept to PCB Prototype
Speaker: Andrae Arajo, Mechatronix Lab
Although making electronic hardware prototypes is becoming increasingly more accessible, each design and manufacturing cycle involves costs and timelines that challenge electrical engineers and systems designers alike. Using best practices in circuit and PCB design enables faster development and more accurate results from the very first iteration. The goal of this presentation is to demonstrate good design practices for developing PCB prototypes that:
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer
Target audience: Beginner |
| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
8. Harnessing the Power of AI in PCB Design: Addressing Challenges and Unlocking Opportunities
Speaker: David Wiens, Siemens
The role of AI in PCB design is becoming crucial as the industry faces a workforce shortage, increasing design complexity and costs, and tighter delivery schedules. This session examines how AI could address these challenges by automating processes, augmenting designer capabilities and improving efficiency. Rapidly evolving technologies like agentic AI will be addressed, as well as their application to the design process. Used effectively in the right environment, AI enables faster, high-quality PCB development. Additionally, AI tackles rising design complexity by analyzing large datasets to optimize performance, reduce costs and enhance design quality. PCB engineering teams that want to stay ahead of the curve should evaluate, adapt and embrace the opportunities that AI-infused design will deliver. The session will also explore challenges associated with AI implementation such as model training data, IP security, results verification and adoption resistance. We’ll discuss where AI excels and what AI is applicable in design today. Key topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. |
Lunch-and-Learn
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| 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. |
9. PCEA Annual Meeting
Speaker: Chair: Stephen V. Chavez, Siemens
Come learn about the Printed Circuit Engineering Association, an international network of engineers, designers and anyone related to printed circuit development. Its mission is to promote printed circuit engineering as a profession and to encourage, facilitate and promote the exchange of information and the integration of new design concepts through communications, seminars, workshops and professional certification via a network of local and regional PCEA-affiliated groups. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner |
| 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
10. Panel: The Future of PCB Design
Speaker: Moderator: Matt Leary, Newgrange Design
This panel will touch on many subjects to raise awareness in the community and ensure we are not left behind in our careers as the industry continues to evolve. As background, we started with conversations with industry leaders and experts. What are they seeing? What are we missing? What do they think we need to be looking at to be prepared for the next 2-5 years? Key points to cover:
This is intended as an overview to provide exposure to coming trends. It will not be a deep technical dive into any of these subjects. The aim is to provide enough information for users to prepare for where the industry might be headed. This may help inform career directions, opportunities and choices to consider in the coming years. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
11. Mastering Complex PCB Design for Modern Electronics
Speaker: Stephen V. Chavez, Siemens
Modern electronics demand sophisticated printed circuit board design, balancing solvability, performance, and manufacturability amidst increasing component densities and routing complexities. This abstract explores critical considerations like signal integrity, EMI, power integrity, thermal optimization and manufacturability, all requiring an integrated approach. We’ll discuss leveraging electronic design automation (EDA) tools, including AI/ML advancements, for efficient, first-pass success. Robust simulation and design-for-manufacturing (DfM) are key. Successful PCB development also hinges on strong cross-disciplinary collaboration and integrating design-for-testability (DfT) principles. Finally, we’ll examine how Industry 4.0 and IoT trends are shaping future PCB design, particularly concerning connectivity and security. This session offers a comprehensive overview of challenges and innovative solutions, emphasizing the interdisciplinary approach essential for today’s dynamic PCB landscape. What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
12. Ask the Flexperts
Speaker: Mark Finstad, Flexible Circuit Technologies, and Nick Koop, TTM Technologies
This course covers the entire gamut of flexible and rigid-flex circuits from two of the most recognized names in the flexible circuit industry: Mark Finstad (co-chair of IPC-2223) and Nick Koop (co-chair of IPC-6013).
This course also includes a complete virtual plant tour of a flexible circuit manufacturing facility to help attendees understand the manufacturing processes. Throughout the presentation, the instructors will share real-life stories of flexible circuit applications gained over 35+ years in the industry. Some are success stories, others not so much, but all provide excellent lessons learned. The instructors also welcome and encourage questions and enjoy wandering off-course with lively interactive discussions on specific topics from the class. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. |
13. Designing for High Speed/SI/and EMI Without Simulation
Speaker: Susy Webb, DesignScience
There is no doubt that designing a printed circuit board is a complex undertaking, incorporating all the electronics and physics needed for quality boards. One thing often used to help predict that the signals and board are being laid out well is simulation. While simulation is very helpful, not every company has a simulation tool (or specialist) that can be utilized for that effort. And unfortunately, simulation itself is incapable of catching every issue of concern. This 3.5-hour presentation will discuss skills the designer must understand and use to set up high quality boards with low noise, good signal integrity, no EMI concerns, are manufacturable, and perform well while in service. Topics to cover:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
14. Replacing ePaper Technical Exchanges with IPC-2581 Implementing Electronically Executable DFM Feedback
Speaker: Vincent Dilello, Cadence Design Systems, and Michael Fisher, KLA
There is no efficient way for designers to receive feedback from their manufacturing partner. At every stage when the data are handled by the manufacturer, feedback is sent through electronic paper, and because feedback is being shared in multiple pieces, those on the designer side must interpret the feedback correctly. Design-for-manufacturability (DfM) analysis has issues as well due to the disparate electronic paper files, which the designer must correlate and then interpret the data, respond to the queries, and approve or reject requests for change. This happens with fab, assembly and test as well. This unreliable process results in increased development cycles and delays in product launches on the design side, and increased manufacturing cycles and delays in getting paid on the manufacturing side. The processes are not repeatable because every company has its own way of handing off that is not consistent. IPC-2851 provides rich, intelligent digital content for fabrication, assembly, and test. The single file includes a hierarchical BoM with complete component attributes for values, tolerances, units of measure, part rank, part class, and more. IPC-2581 also provides electronically executable DFM feedback. While other formats require feedback data to be shared via electronic paper, IPC-2581 delivers that data in XML, which design tools can execute, allowing the engineer to correlate the feedback with specific items in the design: the tools do the work rather than the designer intervening manually. This can be applied to fabrication DfM analysis feedback as well as assembly DfM analysis feedback. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Intermediate |
| 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. |
15. Precision in Design: A Course on Strategic PCB Assembly
Speaker: Tomas Chester, Chester Electronic Design
Effective printed circuit board (PCB) design extends beyond the meticulous consideration of layer stackup and appropriate PCB materials; it equally hinges on the strategic integration of assembly elements. Recognizing the pivotal role that assembly processes play in the manufacturability of a board, this course provides participants with a comprehensive understanding of the intricacies of assembly procedures. By immersing attendees in the nuances of the assembly process, this training empowers them to adeptly navigate the feedback loop, thereby guaranteeing the triumph of present and forthcoming designs. The course will delve into the following aspects of assembly:
This course will impart not only theoretical knowledge but also reinforce learning through practical application. By conducting in-depth analyses of their root causes and instances of failures, participants gain valuable insights into preemptive strategies. Armed with this knowledge, they will be able to proactively mitigate potential issues, ensuring a resilient and successful approach to their current and future designs. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. |
16. Designing in 3D: Breaking the Mold
Speaker: Ethan Pierce, Dodec Labs, and Stephan Schmidt, Harting AG
In an era where electronic systems transcend traditional flat-plane constraints, three-dimensional molded interconnect devices (3D-MIDs) are revolutionizing how we approach circuit design. This 2-hour session introduces the fundamentals of MID technology – encompassing materials, manufacturing techniques, and design strategies – while highlighting its transformative potential for mechanical-electrical integration. Key topics covered:
Further, the seminar will delve into the diverse landscape of materials, design workflows, and manufacturing strategies:
Participants will leave with a depth of understanding encompassing:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
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| 2:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
17. Controlling the Waves: A Field-based Perspective on High-speed PCB Design
Speaker: Daniel Beeker, System Solution Specialists, LLC
Good signal integrity and EMC start with a good PCB design philosophy. It is critical for design engineers to understand the behavior of EM fields. Proper design of the spaces these fields follow through the board is critical. Creating transmission lines that meet the needs of the PDN and fast-switching ICs in today’s high-performance products can be challenging. There are certain questions that need to be answered to define the PCB geometry that will lead to a successful design. This seminar will present an easy-to-understand, science-based approach for PCB design. What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
18. Basics of Flex Design
Speaker: Lauren Waslick, Newgrange Design
Venturing into the world of flexible circuit design might seem intimidating if you have only designed rigid boards in the past. While flex design has important differences to be aware of, many of the basic principles remain the same. As a designer, it is important to understand how they differ and where the key differences fall in the design process. The goal of this presentation is to provide guidance on what to watch out for in each step of the design process when designing a flex board for the first time. Key topics to be covered:
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
The Unsung Hero: Via's Vital Role in PCB Return Paths
Speaker: Tomas Chester, Chester Electronic Design, and Rick Hartley, Rhartley Enterprises
This presentation delves into the critical role of vias in ensuring signal integrity by providing optimal return paths in printed circuit boards (PCBs). We’ll explore why a well-defined return path is crucial for containing electromagnetic fields and minimizing noise. This knowledge will be built upon the foundation that planes are the optimal solution for field containment, but are unable to enable return path in the z-axis. Attendees will gain a practical understanding of via behavior through simulations, starting with common design pitfalls and progressing towards optimized solutions. We’ll analyze real-world scenarios and demonstrate how strategic via placement and design choices can significantly improve signal integrity. Finally, we’ll examine advanced techniques, including the concept of a “via-in-via” structure for achieving coaxial-like return paths. The session will conclude with guidance on selecting components, such as BGAs, with optimized ground return paths to further enhance PCB performance, ensuring design success. Key topics to cover:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
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| 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. |
F2. Copper Pours on PCB Signal Layer
Speaker: Rick Hartley, RHartley Enterprises
There is running debate among many PCB design engineers about the use of copper pour segments in or on some layers of circuit boards. Some engineers say that copper pours can increase crosstalk, or change impedance of transmission lines, or increase EMI, or have an impact on power delivery, etc. Others say that the opposite is true. This session will discuss the real impact, good and bad, of copper pour segments on signal layers of PCBs.
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. |
F3. The Prototype Trap: Bridging the Sourcing Gap to Volume Production
Speaker: Ed Dodd, Cofactr
The transition from a “works-like” prototype to a scalable production run is often the most volatile phase of hardware development. Engineers frequently fall into the prototype trap. They design with components that are easily accessible via catalog distributors but lack the manufacturer support, price stability, or volume pipelines required for mass production. This mismatch results in costly midstream respins, “unbuildable” bills of materials (BoMs) and stalled market entry. This session provides a technical framework for Production-Ready Sourcing (PRS). We will move beyond basic availability checks to analyze deeper scalability metrics, such as manufacturer lifecycle status (EOL/NRND), minimum order quantity (MOQ) impacts on unit cost, and the geographic concentration of sub-tier suppliers. Attendees will learn specific PCB layout strategies for second sourcing, including the use of universal land patterns and dual-footprint geometries to accommodate alternate components without requiring new copper. By integrating supply chain intelligence directly into the process, designers can ensure their prototypes are not just functional but also commercially viable. Attendees will leave with a practical checklist to audit their designs for “scale-readiness” before the first board is ever fabricated. Key topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
F4. Career Day
Speaker: Matthew McBride, BAE Systems, and John Burkhert, Jr.
Join a group including PCB designers, hiring managers, recruiters and recent graduates as they share their expertise in a career in printed circuit design and manufacturing. Among the topics of this hands-on program are how to prepare for job interviews, demonstrating capabilities with AI skills, networking, and negotiation. Bring your resume and your questions! Topics to cover:
Who should attend: College Students
Target audience: Beginner |
| 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
F5. Changing PCB Design Software: No Big Deal, Right?
Speaker: Lauren Waslick, Newgrange Design
When an organization decides to change its electrical design software, it can go two ways: 1) it can be met with frustration and resistance, or 2) it can be welcomed with open arms! It’s all about how the decision is reviewed, analyzed and implemented. To some, the software we use as designers is seen as “replaceable” based on short-term cost considerations. However, those who use it every day know that commitment to the right software can set you up for long-term success (and savings). Sometimes a design software change will make sense, but when? And how? This presentation will cover why this decision should not be underestimated and how to succeed once the decision has been made. Key topics covered:
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
F6. The PCB Market Outlook
Speaker: Dr. Hayao Nakahara, NT Information Ltd.
Hayao Nakahara is author of the NTI-100 list of the world’s largest PCB companies and the foremost market authority for the printed circuit industry. This presentation will look at the past, current, and future of the PCB market, what is pushing the industry, and, of course, AI, focusing on various issues not only in the market but also in technology changes. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner |
| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
F7. Keynote
Speaker: TBA
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| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
F8. The Hidden Failure Mode Using Mixed VIPPO in BGA Structures
Speaker: Albert Block, DirectPCB
Via-in-pad plated over (VIPPO) technology offers clear advantages in modern BGA designs, including space savings, improved signal integrity, and more efficient escape routing for fine pitch components. However, when VIPPO and traditional via structures are mixed within the same BGA footprint, the resulting mismatch in coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) can introduce latent mechanical failure modes that may not appear during manufacturing but emerge later in the field. This session examines why mixed-structure CTE imbalance creates stress concentrations, how these stresses propagate through solder joints during thermal cycling, and the subtle reliability risks that often go unnoticed in qualification testing. We will outline design strategies, material choices and layout practices that mitigate these failure mechanisms, enabling engineers to fully leverage VIPPO benefits without compromising long-term product reliability. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Test Engineer, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Intermediate |
| 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. |
F9. The Most Common Issues Seen in Incoming Designs for PCB Fabrication
Speaker: Mike Tucker, SCC Shennan China Circuits, and Ray Fugitt, Siemens
In preparation for this presentation, we talked to many of the largest PCB manufacturers in the US and abroad. We then developed a list of the most common errors found on incoming designs. We look at each of the errors and discuss ways to find them before the designs are sent out for manufacturing. The methods we will look at include netlist comparison, design for manufacturing and design rule analysis. We also talk about proper documentation needed for PCB manufacturing. We encourage attendee participation and ask folks to bring their challenges for discussion. After this seminar, the PCB designer will take back some knowledge to better assist them in using their existing tools in the market to produce better and more accurate designs. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. |
F10. Lessons Learned from Installing AI in an EMS NPI Environment
Speaker: Phil Marcoux, OnePPM
As electronics manufacturing services (EMS) providers increasingly integrate artificial intelligence (AI) into their operations, new product introduction (NPI) presents both unique opportunities and significant challenges, especially for PCB designers. This session shares practical lessons from experienced presenters to help designers and product developers use the tools and adaptations that leading EMS providers are using. The goal is to benefit new product introductions, where speed, accuracy and adaptability are critical to success. Drawing on hands-on implementation experience, the presentation will explore key use cases in NPI, including the use of component search agents, demand forecasting, process optimization, defect detection, and design-for-manufacturability analysis. Attendees will gain insight into the technical, organizational, and data-related hurdles encountered – such as mistakes by harried designers, lack of access to historical data, constantly changing product designs, and integration with legacy systems. Topics to cover:
Emphasis will be placed on learning empathy, aligning expectations with business objectives, managing schedules, and ensuring greater success rates. By the end of this session, participants should have a clearer understanding of how to effectively introduce their designs into the evolving AI-enhanced environment of their EMS partners. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Assembler Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner |
| 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. |
F11. Designing High Thermal PCBs with Advanced Dielectrics
Speaker: Chris Parker, TCLAD
As thermal density in high power electronics continues to increase, the ability to manage heat precisely at the component level has become critical. This study presents direct temperature measurements of Mosfet heat sources across multiple configurations of PCB substrates and thermal enhancement components. Specifically, it evaluates the thermal performance of a high conductivity dielectric from TCLAD, compared to traditional FR-4, using a quadrant-based test board populated with SOT223 power transistors and surface mount thermal bridge (SMTB) components. The test vehicle was a six-layer PCB, engineered with four identical quadrants, each containing four ZETEX FZ493 SOT223 transistors as heat generating components. This symmetrical layout permitted direct, side-by-side comparisons of different thermal configurations under identical electrical loads and copper geometries. Quadrant 1 featured no SMTBs (serving as the baseline), quadrant 2 included a small SMTB (SMTB2114P30E), quadrant 3 a medium SMTB (SMTB3123A30A), and quadrant 4 a large SMTB (SMTB2920P30E). Both FR-4 and the novel versions of the test board were fabricated and assembled identically to isolate the thermal impact of the dielectric and thermal bridge materials. Thermal imaging revealed that the novel substrate significantly outperformed FR-4, reducing maximum component temperatures by up to 48°F (26.6°C) in quadrant 1, where no SMTBs were used. When paired with the largest SMTBs in quadrant 4, the novel board achieved a total temperature reduction of 29°C compared to the FR-4 board in quadrant 1. This result clearly demonstrates the combined thermal benefits of using a high-conductivity dielectric material alongside strategically placed heat-spreading components. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer
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| 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
F12. The Journey of a Material Disruptor
Speaker: Stephen Driver, JIVA Materials
The PCB industry has long operated under the assumption that “it’s always been done this way” – from FR-4 substrates and E-glass reinforcement to ENIG finishes and 1.6mm board thickness. But with raw material costs climbing, sustainability mandates tightening and industry standards failing to keep pace with innovation, the conditions for disruption have never been riper. This presentation follows the real-world journey of a natural fiber-based, water-soluble PCB laminate developed as a sustainable alternative to conventional FR-4. Using the novel laminate as a case study, we walk through the four critical stages every disruptive material must navigate – ideation, certification, qualification and integration – offering an honest account of the roadblocks, breakthroughs and lessons learned along the way. The session also examines the broader forces pressuring the industry to evolve, including soaring copper, gold and E-glass prices, outdated industry standards that inadvertently lock out innovation, and the net-zero commitments of major OEMs that are creating real commercial demand for sustainable alternatives. What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner |
| 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
F13. Panel: Cutting-Edge Fabrication Processes
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| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
19. Placement Techniques for a New Designer
Speaker: Kristen Aguiar, Newgrange Design
For a new designer, and even for an experienced designer, component placement can In this presentation, we will work through the placement of a sample design, focusing on Key topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
20. Decoupling Capacitor Strategies
Speaker: Keven Coates, Novium Designs
How do you design a high-speed digital circuit with enough bypass caps in the right area to supply all the peak power demands? Topics to cover:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
21. Mastering Design Rule Check (DRC) Settings for Optimal PCB Design
Speaker: Troy Hopkins, Hopfinity Designs
In today’s world of PCB design, where complexity continues to escalate, ensuring manufacturability, reliability and optimal performance has never been more critical. The design rule check (DRC) functionality in modern CAD tools plays a vital role in this process, acting as an automated safety net to catch potential errors before they become costly mistakes. However, the true power of the DRC lies in its ability to enforce well-defined, contextually relevant design rules that require a deep understanding of both the tool and the project-specific requirements.
Topics to cover:
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
22. PCB Design for Engineers
Speaker: Susy Webb, Design Science
Many engineers are now required to design their own PCBs but have not had the benefit of learning the particular needs of electronics, signals, placement, routing and manufacturability in those boards.
All these topics will include information on signal integrity, EMI and impedance control to make a board that works well from the first build. Many aspects of making a board manufacturable also help to make it less expensive, so an examination of that will wrap the technical things up, followed by information on the pros and cons of hand routing vs. autorouting and the impact on board quality. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
23. RF and Mixed Signal PC Board Design
Speaker: Rick Hartley, RHartley Enterprises
This 3.5-hour session is intended for board designers to understand the “things” RF engineers request during PCB layout. Experienced RF engineers will likely not learn anything new from this course, as the material is mainly geared to board designers.
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. |
24. Getting To 112 Gb/S & Beyond – A Tutorial on Very-High-Speed Digital Design
Speaker: Chuck Corley, Speeding Edge
Electronic designs of all kinds are operating with increasingly faster clock rates and rise times. Now digital designs are operating at 112Gbs speeds and faster. At the same time, the pressure to complete designs in fewer design cycles is putting pressure on design teams to deliver designs to manufacturing that are right the first time. With the speeds of signals and components rising into the multi-hundred-gigahertz range, relying on the traditional breadboarding or hardware prototyping process often results in a product never making it to market. This increase in component speed has made it necessary for design engineers to master the design techniques that were once only the province of supercomputer engineers. This course relies heavily on the proven methods developed for supercomputers and terabit routers. It also draws on experience with disc drives and high-performance video games. This presentation will examine:
Subjects covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. |
25. DC to Daylight
Speaker: Karen Burnham, EMC United, and Dan Beeker, System Solution Specialists, LLC
Electromagnetic compatibility, signal integrity and photonics are often discussed and taught as if they are separate disciplines. However, they all share the same physical roots: the control of electromagnetic fields. As data rates get faster, today’s electrical engineer is more likely to encounter projects that touch on all three of these disciplines. Understanding them as an integrated whole can reduce confusion and improve design efficiency. As such, this seminar builds up understanding of electrical and electronic hardware from physical fundamentals and DC circuits on up to optics. In the first part, we explain electrostatics, magnetostatics, and electromagnetic fields in the simplest terms, starting from the movement of charged particles in circuits. We build up how capacitance and inductance work in circuits and the space around those circuits, and how those factors affect performance. We also explain how even DC circuits end up generating electromagnetic fields of much higher frequencies. In the second part, we focus on how these fundamentals impact EMC concerns; in particular, how different circuit and structural elements start radiating like antennas, and how we need to provide transmission line-like structures instead to control and contain fields and prevent interference. This section focuses on issues primarily found in the 10kHz to 6GHz domain. Next up, we focus on signal integrity in the hundreds of MHz to hundreds of GHz range. SI starts with a good PCB design philosophy. It is critical for design engineers to understand the behavior of EM fields. Proper design of the spaces these fields follow through the board is critical. Creating transmission lines that will meet the needs of the PDN and the fast-switching ICs in today’s high-performance products can be a challenge. There are certain questions that need to be answered to define the PCB geometry that will lead to a successful design. Finally, we will cover topics in photonics and optical communications at greater than 100GHz. These include what optics/photonics means, the main differences between photonics and electronics, materials at optical wavelengths, electromagnetic fields in and around optical components, interaction between photonic and electronic components, and more. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
26. HDI Via Design: Planning the Energy Pipelines
Speaker: Dan Beeker, System Solution Specialists, LLC
This session will focus on the importance of understanding the advantages and limitations of high density via usage. The key is understanding how to connect the signals and grounds through the board stackup. It is also essential to understand what is needed to provide the proper thermal connections between the ICs and ground planes. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. |
27. Using AI in Hardware and PCB Design: Real Strategies to Increase Efficiency and Output
Speaker: Ethan Pierce, Dodec Labs
Engineering and design teams are increasingly driven to integrate AI technologies that:
The purpose of this master class is to equip designers and engineers with the knowledge to accelerate their workflows using AI tools. This no-nonsense course focuses on leveraging AI tools in the hardware design workflow. We will explore the time and resources involved in a typical design process and then dive into each of these processes to demonstrate how the presented tools can accelerate workflows across all ecosystems, such as automotive, defense and medical. For the sake of familiarity, this class will build on popular open-source projects. While we will mention specific vendors, our focus will be on the frameworks for interacting with these tools. This course will alleviate fears that these tools will replace us and instead show how they can become valuable allies. Once equipped with this knowledge, participants can approach their hardware design cycles with the enhanced capabilities of AI-driven workflows. Additionally, it will help you keep pace with technological advancements, preparing you to evaluate the effectiveness of new tools as they emerge. This course is for:
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer. Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Assembly Engineer/Operator, CEO/COO/Sales/Marketing
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. |
Lunch and Learn (Thursday Conference Attendees Only)
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| 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. |
28. Stackups That Work: Balancing Signal Integrity, Reliability and Manufacturability
Speaker: Ramon Roche, NCAB Group
Modern high-speed digital systems place unprecedented demands on PCB stackup design, where signal integrity, reliability, and manufacturability are tightly coupled. This engineering-focused session provides a practical walk-through of stackup development for today’s digital designs, keeping fabrication realities front and center at every step. The presentation begins with the fundamentals that most strongly influence performance and yield: dielectric material selection, layer pairing strategies, copper balancing, and impedance control. From there, it explores how HDI structures, microvia configurations, and via reliability considerations impact both electrical behavior and long-term robustness. Rather than treating these topics in isolation, the session connects design decisions directly to fabrication constraints, tolerances, and process capabilities. The session then turns to an increasingly valuable design strategy: leveraging rapid fabrication and assembly to validate stackup assumptions before full production release. Attendees will see how small-scale builds can be used to evaluate impedance margins, crosstalk behavior and microvia reliability under real manufacturing conditions – reducing risk, avoiding costly redesigns and improving first-pass success. What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. |
29. BGA Breakout: Escaping the Field
Speaker: Tomas Chester, Chester Electronic Design
As BGA pitches shrink and pin counts soar toward the multi-thousand-pin mark, the breakout phase is no longer a simple routing exercise – it is a high-stakes engineering challenge where signal integrity, power delivery and manufacturing yield collide. In this intensive tutorial, we move beyond basic fanouts to explore a holistic, system-level approach to BGA breakout and “escaping the field.” Starting at the foundation: the schematic, we will demonstrate how intelligent symbol partitioning and pin-naming conventions directly influence layout efficiency. From there, we establish a rigorous “hierarchy of escape,” teaching attendees how to prioritize power pads, signal transitions and the critical placement of decoupling capacitors and ferrite beads to minimize loop inductance. The core of the course focuses on the physical “puzzle” of high-density routing. We will perform a deep-dive analysis into via utilization – comparing advantages and disadvantages of blind, buried and backdrilled vias. This session will include granular walkthroughs of diverse, real-world architectures:
Attendees will leave with a toolkit of routing strategies, including pin-swapping logic, pad breakout directionality and methods for maintaining reference plane continuity under dense pin fields. Learning objectives:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Intermediate, Advanced |
| 2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. |
30. Noise, SI, and EMI in Cables and Connectors
Speaker: Keven Coates, Novium Designs
Most PCBs connect to something, but in many cases connectors and cabling can introduce noise, bit errors, and problems! As a space and avionics harness designer, I’ll cover:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. |
31. Heat Management Strategies through Better Layout
Speaker: Syed Ubaid Ali Warsi, Wavetronix
With continuous technological developments, electronic circuits are not only becoming faster and smaller but also more power-hungry. Consequently, related thermal issues are more prevalent than ever because most modern PCBs consist of numerous high-power components such as high-performance processors, transceivers, Mosfets, and high-power LEDs, leading to excessive heat. Additionally, power conversion circuitry, including DC-DC converters and regulators, contributes significantly to temperature elevation and hotspots. Besides the components, the resistance of the electrical connections, copper traces, and vias contribute to heat, and power losses. Thermal stress stands out as a primary cause of circuit malfunction, resulting in performance degradation or even system malfunction or failure. To address thermal stresses at the layout level, PCB designers must incorporate effective techniques to reduce heating impacts. This includes careful material selection, strategic component placement, power ground plane construction, thermal vias, and more. This presentation will explore these effective strategies and tricks that layout engineers can adopt to identify and mitigate major hotspots, ultimately enhancing the thermal performance of PCBs. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer, Test Engineer
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| 2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. |
32. Librarian: The How and Why for Lower Costs and Design Optimization
Speaker: Justin Fleming, LiveWire
In modern electronic design, the accuracy and consistency of PCB library components are critical to both product reliability and manufacturing efficiency. By implementing accurate and standards-compliant footprints and well-structured schematic symbols, design teams can ensure consistency, reduce errors and streamline schematic-to-layout workflows
What you will learn:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
| 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. |
33. DFT: A PCB Designer’s Guide to Design for Test
Speaker: Troy Hopkins, Hopfinity Designs
Design for test (DfT) is a crucial aspect of PCB design that ensures manufacturability, reliability and cost-effective production. By integrating testability considerations early in the design process, engineers can minimize troubleshooting time, reduce field failures and streamline production testing. This session will explore various PCB and PCBA testing methods, the design decisions that support them and best practices to enhance test coverage while balancing cost and complexity. Key topics covered:
What you will learn:
This session is ideal for PCB designers, hardware engineers, and manufacturing professionals looking to enhance their understanding of DfT principles and their impact on product quality and efficiency. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator, Fabricator Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
34. PCB Thermal Design: Quenching the Blaze
Speaker: Tomas Chester, Chester Electronic Design, and Ethan Pierce, Dodec Labs
Amid the fast-paced advancements in PCB design, thermal consideration and thermal management of designs are of paramount concern. Engineers and designers are constantly seeking innovative ways to meet efficiency and reliability standards. This seminar aims to explain complex thermal theories and introduce practical approaches to optimizing PCB design for superior thermal performance. An examination and understanding of the design strategies and process to promote a performant and reliable system. This will be tied together with design examples and personal anecdotes Key discussion areas include:
Further, the seminar will delve into the diverse landscape of PCB materials and design strategies:
The discussion explores simulations of thermal performance, using a comprehensive simulation to evaluate the thermal performance of the discussed design strategies, and integrating learned concepts into system design. Participants will leave with a depth of understanding encompassing:
Join us to demystify the intricacies of thermal management in PCB design and propel yourself toward a mastery of the art and science of creating thermally efficient and reliable systems. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Test Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
35. Launching Electronics with Confidence: A Guide to Successful Design Release
Speaker: Syed Ubaid Ali Warsi, Wavetronix
In the dynamic realm of electronics, completing a PCB layout is just the tip of the iceberg. The real challenge lies in seamlessly signing off the design and generating the manufacturing release. The significance of having comprehensive documentation, thorough checklists, and strategic review meetings before any design release cannot be overstated. In the fast-paced world of technology, where time to market is a decisive factor in product success, hasty design releases can prove to be detrimental. Organizations often face nightmares when crucial elements are overlooked. History provides cautionary tales, such as the downfall of giants like Kodak and RIM (Blackberry phones), underscoring the importance of timely product launches. In this session we'll explore the importance of comprehensive documentation, checklists, and thorough review meetings prior to design release. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Designer, SI Designer
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| 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. |
36. Differential Pair Routing for SI and EMI Control
Speaker: Keith Kowal, Applied Materials
In the realm of PCB design, analog to digital converters (ADCs) and digital to analog converters (DACs) play a vital role in contemporary society. As technology continues to advance, there is a growing demand for electronic devices that are more compact, faster, and more reliable. This presentation aims to explore the key factors, challenges, and strategies associated with noise reduction in PCB design, as well as to increase reliability and performance. The techniques explained will include layout, grounding and power distribution. The seminar will start with the basics of ADCs and DACs. The second part will show ways for a PCB design to reduce the signal-to-noise ratio. The class will demonstrate techniques for grouping DC-DC converters (power distribution) and explain “point of load” concepts to designers. Additionally, best practices for PCB layout for FPGA/CPLD, digital logic, op-amps, and oscillators will be included. Also presented: Several guidelines for I/O protection, ESD circuits and cable interfacing (chassis ground). In summary, topics that will be explored in detail include noise reduction strategies for signal integrity and various design considerations. Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. |
37. Low Layer Count PCB Design
Speaker: Rick Hartley, RHartley Enterprises
ircuit boards for the automotive, handheld device and IoT (Internet of Things) worlds are often driven by the need for low cost (driving very low layer count), moderate to high part density, mixed-signal applications, low power dissipation and sometimes a transmit/receive antenna. This combination of needs makes PCB design an extreme challenge. Creating 1-, 2-, or 4-layer PCBs, with excellent signal integrity and low noise/interference and no EMI issues, can, by itself, be a very serious challenge. A little of the “right” know-how makes the challenge much easier. Topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. |
38. Advanced PCB Manufacturing Processes for Aerospace and Defense Electronics
Speaker: Kunal Patel, Mega Circuit
The rapid advancement of electronic systems has driven significant innovation in PCB manufacturing technologies to meet increasing demands for higher interconnect density, improved reliability and tighter dimensional control. Modern PCB fabrication has evolved beyond conventional subtractive processes to incorporate advanced materials, precision process control and high-resolution patterning techniques. Key developments include high-density interconnect (HDI) architectures, microvia and stacked via formation, advanced lamination strategies, laser drilling and improved surface finish technologies tailored for fine-pitch assembly and high-frequency applications. Additionally, process integration with automation, in-line inspection, and data-driven manufacturing control has enabled enhanced yield, consistency and traceability, particularly for mission-critical aerospace, defense and high-performance computing systems. Topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, Fabricator Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Intermediate |
| 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. |
39. Panel: Ask the Experts
Join leading subject matter experts in printed circuit design, engineering and manufacturing for an open discussion on the industry’s most pressing problems. |
| 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. |
40. HDI/Microvias Routing Solutions
Speaker: Susy Webb, Design Science
With the pitch of the parts getting tighter and the pin count of BGAs going up, there is a need to get as much routing as possible into very dense areas of the board. HDI/microvias will help accomplish this, but the technology requires some thought and a different setup in terms of what is needed and how to accomplish it from a design perspective. This presentation will examine:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, SI Engineer
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
| 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. |
41. Heat Management for SMD, LED, and Systems 1W to 50W
Speaker: Keven Coates, Novium Designs
Do you use power MOSFETs, high-power LEDs, power resistors, or hot processors in your design and want to avoid heat-related system failures? This course covers the best options for managing heat costs effectively and reliably. Key topics covered:
Who should attend: PCB Designer/Design Engineer, System Designer, Hardware Engineer, Assembly Engineer/Operator
Target audience: Beginner, Intermediate |
