Here’s a practical guide to PCB stackup design for 6–8 layer boards, what each layer does, and how to choose/arrange them for signal integrity, power integrity, EMI, and manufacturability.
Goals of a good stackup
Provide solid reference planes for every signal layer to ensure short, predictable return paths and low EMI.
Support controlled impedance traces and differential pairs.
Offer low-inductance power delivery with well-coupled power/ground planes.
Isolate noisy domains (switch-mode power, motors) from sensitive analog/RF/clock regions.
Stay symmetric for manufacturability (warpage control) and align with your fab’s standard materials.
Key principles
Put a continuous ground plane adjacent to every outer signal layer. Signals should always “see” a nearby reference.
Keep at least one uninterrupted, solid ground plane in the stack (avoid splitting the main ground).
Pair power planes next to ground planes (tight dielectric) to reduce PDN impedance and improve decoupling effectiveness.
On adjacent signal layers, route orthogonally (e.g., horizontal on one, vertical on the other) to reduce broadside crosstalk.
Bury the noisiest or most sensitive high-speed signals between ground planes when possible for shielding.
Minimize crossings of splits/holes in reference planes; if unavoidable, add nearby stitching vias to give the return current a short path.
Typical 6-layer stackups
6L Option A (balanced, versatile: two ground planes and one power plane)
Layer order and roles
Table
Layer
Role
Notes
L1 (Top)
High-speed/sensitive signals and components
Adjacent to L2 GND for controlled impedance microstrip; short escape routes.
L2
Solid GND plane
Primary reference; maintain unbroken.
L3
Inner signals (lower-speed or secondary high-speed)
Stripline between L2 and L4; orthogonal to L1 routing.
L4
Power plane (split as needed)
Place near L5 GND for tight coupling; keep shapes simple and avoid slivers.
L5
Solid GND plane
Secondary reference; shields inner/outer layers; via-stitch near edges.
L6 (Bottom)
Signals, test, low-speed
Adjacent to L5 GND for controlled impedance microstrip.
When to choose: Mixed-speed digital with moderate density; one or a few power rails that can share a plane. Good EMI behavior due to dual GND planes and buried striplines on L3.
6L Option B (more routing capacity; power as copper pours)
Table
Layer
Role
Notes
L1 (Top)
High-speed/sensitive signals and components
Microstrip over L2 GND.
L2
Solid GND plane
Keep continuous.
L3
Inner signals
Stripline between L2 and L4.
L4
Inner signals
Stripline between L3 and L5 (effective when L5 is GND).
L5
Solid GND plane
Creates a “GND cavity” for L3/L4 signals; strong shielding.
L6 (Bottom)
Signals and local power pours
Use wide pours/traces for power distribution; reference to L5 GND.
When to choose: Dense digital with many nets where you want two buried routing layers. Power is distributed via pours/traces instead of a dedicated plane.
Typical 8-layer stackups
8L Option A (classic high-speed: two ground planes flanking each signal region)
Table
Layer
Role
Notes
L1 (Top)
High-speed/sensitive signals and components
Microstrip over L2 GND.
L2
Solid GND plane
Unbroken; primary reference.
L3
Inner signals (HS)
Stripline between L2 GND and L4 PWR/GND.
L4
Power plane (or GND if PDN elsewhere)
Tight-coupled to L3 and L5 for cavity effect.
L5
Solid GND plane
Shields L4/L6 region.
L6
Inner signals (HS)
Stripline between L5 GND and L7 PWR/GND.
L7
Power plane (or GND)
Pair with L6 and L8.
L8 (Bottom)
Signals, test
Microstrip over L7 reference.
When to choose: Complex high-speed (DDR, multi‑lane SerDes) needing multiple shielded signal layers and two power planes well-coupled to ground.
8L Option B (extra quiet core with dual GNDs in middle)
Table
Layer
Role
Notes
L1 (Top)
Signals/components
Microstrip over L2 GND.
L2
Solid GND plane
Reference for L1 and L3.
L3
Inner signals (HS)
Stripline between L2 and L4.
L4
Solid GND plane
Forms a central GND “wall” for shielding.
L5
Power plane
Paired closely to L4 for low PDN inductance.
L6
Inner signals (HS)
Stripline between L5 and L7.
L7
Solid GND plane
Reference for L6 and L8.
L8 (Bottom)
Signals/test
Microstrip over L7 GND.
When to choose: Very EMI‑sensitive systems or where you want exceptionally strong shielding and low PDN impedance (central GND next to power).
What each layer “does” in these stacks
Outer signal layers (Top/Bottom): Short breakout, components, high-speed microstrips referenced to adjacent planes. Keep fast edges over solid ground. Avoid routing over plane splits; if you must, add stitching vias near the transition.
Solid ground planes: Provide continuous low-inductance return paths, reduce loop area, and shield inner signals. Keep them unbroken; reserve cutouts only for essential features (e.g., slots, mounting holes) and stitch around those edges.
Power planes: Low-impedance power distribution when closely coupled to ground (thin dielectric). Keep shapes simple; avoid narrow “necks”. If splitting, do it on power, not on your main ground. Place sensitive rails away from noisy ones.
Inner signal layers: Shielded striplines; great for highest-speed or lowest-noise routes. Route orthogonally vs adjacent signal layers to minimize coupling.
Impedance and materials (practical notes)
Impedance control relies on: trace width, copper thickness, dielectric thickness (between signal and its reference plane), and dielectric constant. Ask your fab for standard 6L/8L stackups and use those values in your calculator.
For tight PDN and good decoupling effectiveness, place power planes close to ground planes (thin dielectric between them).
Keep the overall stack symmetric (copper and dielectric) to reduce warp/camber in fabrication.
Crosstalk and return paths
Orthogonal routing on adjacent signal layers reduces broadside coupling.
Maintain uninterrupted reference under high-speed lines. Crossing a split forces return currents to detour, increasing loop area and EMI. Use stitching vias (and, where appropriate, high-frequency stitching capacitors between split domains) close to the transition so returns have a short path.
For motor drivers or large, pulsed currents, optimize current return paths in the ground to minimize ground bounce that can disturb MCU/logic returns. Keep high-current returns localized and away from sensitive references.
Power distribution tips
Prefer continuous ground over split ground. If you must segment grounds for safety/noise reasons, tie them at a single, intentional point and control where return currents flow.
Place bulk caps near VRM outputs and local high-frequency decoupling at each IC power pin, so the return currents loop tightly into the nearest ground.
EMI considerations
Bury the switch node of buck converters and keep the hot loop tight, directly over ground plane.
Route fast edges on layers immediately adjacent to solid ground; bury especially noisy or sensitive lines between two ground planes when possible.
Use stitching vias along board edges and around plane openings to contain fields.
DFM/manufacturing notes
Keep the stack symmetric and use your PCB house’s standard materials when possible (cost, lead time, predictable impedance).
Avoid very thin copper next to very thick copper in asymmetric ways; balance copper to reduce bow/twist.
In Flux, DRC runs continuously in the Review panel—keep it clean as you place, fanout, and route to catch plane clearances, mask dams, annular rings, and rule violations early.
How to choose between 6 vs 8 layers
Choose 6 layers when: moderate net count and speeds, 1–2 power rails, and good placement allows short returns with two solid ground planes.
Choose 8 layers when: multiple high‑speed interfaces, strict EMI/EMC targets, or many rails needing dedicated planes with shielding for several high-speed signal layers.
If you share target interfaces (e.g., DDR, USB, PCIe), PDN rails, and any EMI/compliance requirements, I can propose a concrete 6L or 8L stack with reference-plane pairings, routing layer assignments, and initial impedance targets you can hand to your fab.
Wirelessly connects nets on schematic. Used to organize schematics and separate functional blocks. To wirelessly connect net portals, give them same designator. #portal
Wirelessly connects power nets on schematic. Identical to the net portal, but with a power symbol. Used to organize schematics and separate functional blocks. To wirelessly connect power net portals, give them the same designator. #portal #power
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