GROUND PLANE

In electrical engineering, a 'ground plane' is an electrically conductive surface.

Contents
Radio antenna theory
Printed circuit boards
See also
External articles

Radio antenna theory


In telecommunication, a ''ground plane'' structure or relationship exists between the antenna and another object, where the only structure of the object is a structure which permits the antenna to function as such (e.g., forms a reflector or director for an antenna). This sometimes serves as the near-field reflection point for an antenna, or as a reference ground in a circuit.
There are a variety of ground planes, including drooping ground planes, and flat circular ground plane antennas. A ground plane may consist of a natural surface, such as the Earth (or ocean) or an artificial surface of opportunity (such as the roof of a motor vehicle). A ground plane can also be a specially designed artificial surface (such as the radial elements of a quarter-wave ground plane antenna). Artificial (or substitute) grounds (e.g., ground planes) concerns the grounding structure for the antenna and includes the conductive structure used in place of the earth and which grounding structure is distinct from the earth.

Printed circuit boards


A ''ground plane'' in PCB assembly is a layer of copper that appears to most signals as an infinite ground potential. This helps reduce noise and helps ensure that all integrated circuits within a system compare different signals' voltages to the same potential.
It also serves to make the circuit design easier, allowing the designer to ground anything without having to run multiple tracks; the component needing grounding is routed directly to the ground plane on another layer.
Ground planes can also be placed on adjacent layers to power planes creating a large parallel plate capacitor that helps filter the power supply.
Ground planes are sometimes split and then connected by a thin trace. This allows the separation of analog and digital sections of a board or the inputs and outputs of amplifiers. The thin trace is low enough impedance to keep the two sides very close to the same potential while keeping the ground currents of one side from impacting the other.

See also



List of electronics topics

Power plane

Microstrip and Stripline

Line-of-sight propagation

Radio electronics and Radio propagation

PCB layout guidelines and Printed Circuit Board Milling

Antenna tuner

Salisbury screen

External articles


;References and citations

★ ''General Source'': Federal Standard 1037C in support of MIL-STD-188
;Websites

★ John Whitmore, sci.electronics > What is a PCB with a Ground plane?. Aug 11 1992.

★ E. Orros and B. Cocco, Design Your Own Ground Plane.

★ Amateur Quarter Wave Ground Plane Antenna Calculator. Computer Support Group, Inc., 2006.

What is a Ground Plane?Criterion Cellular, 2006.

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