Home/Tools/Φ Z-PDN
⎁ Series-RLC math, log-log plot

Φ Z-PDN — target-impedance visualizer.

Build your decoupling rack, set the rail and the transient step, and watch |Zpdn(f)| cross or not cross the target line. The same closed-form math the PDN target-impedance guide teaches — runs entirely in your browser, no install, no signup.

Ztarget— mΩ
first crossing
worst |Z| peak

Caps in the rack

nameSRF|Z|@SRFqty
⎁ The honest method

What this is — and what it isn’t.

What it solves

Each cap is a series-RLC: Z = √(R² + (ωL − 1/ωC)²). The rack in parallel is summed as complex admittances, |Zpdn| = 1/|ΣYi|. The plane is treated as a fourth lumped RLC with parallel-plate C, low ESL, low ESR.

Target line: Ztarget = V·ripple/ΔI — the same formula the PDN article teaches. We sweep 1 kHz to 1 GHz across 200 log-spaced points.

What it ignores

  • Mounting inductance from cap → via → plane. Real ESL is the datasheet value plus the layout mounting. Add ~0.2–0.5 nH per via.
  • Frequency-dependent ESR (real caps trend up at high f). Constant-R is a good first approximation.
  • Plane resonance peaks (cavity modes). We treat the plane as a single capacitance.
  • VRM output impedance — we assume the regulator is the “low frequency floor” and the rack handles everything else.

When to use it

Use Φ Z-PDN to rapidly compare two rack designs — “does removing the 1 µF row break my margin?” — in a few seconds rather than a SPICE iteration.

For the real sign-off, run TRM (which couples PDN with thermal IR-drop) or a SPICE bench-correlated model. Φ Z-PDN is the funnel; TRM is the authority.

Sign off the rail, not just the rack.

TRM couples PDN and thermal so the IR-drop and the temperature meet on the same network. 14-day trial.