Items Tagged with 'power rail'

ARTICLES

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Seeing Through the Noise: Reliable Power Rail Measurements in High-Current AI Systems

In this article, power rail voltage measurement uncertainty is examined using several different probe configurations to monitor VCore measurements on a Picotest S2000 load stepper board. The results reveal measurement variations up to 27 mV — a level of uncertainty that can completely mask the performance improvements engineers are seeking from advanced VRM technologies. Read on to learn how engineers can trust their measurements when the uncertainty exceeds the performance gains they are trying to validate.



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The Ultimate Power Rail Noise Measurement

Do I really need to use a power rail probe to measure ripple and noise? Power rail probes are single ended, so does that mean I can only monitor one power rail at a time? Are there other, more affordable options available? In this blog post, Steve Sandler answers to these questions and more.


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Build Your Own Low-Cost Power Rail Probe

Probing signals with a bandwidth below 100 MHz and voltage sensitivity above 100 mV is a no-brainer. Regardless of the type of signal or the source impedance, the venerable 10x passive probe is the answer. However, at bandwidths >100 MHz and with voltage sensitivity <100 mV, the 10x passive probe may not be the best option. In this article, SIJ technical editor Eric Bogatin introduces an easy-to-implement, low-cost alternative to the 10x passive probe specifically for power-rail measurements.


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