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The Foundations of Signal Integrity

ISBN: 978-0-470-54348-1

October 2009

Wiley-IEEE Press

360 pages

Description
The first book to focus on the electromagnetic basis of signal integrity

The Foundations of Signal Integrity is the first of its kind—a reference that examines the physical foundation of system integrity based on electromagnetic theory derived from Maxwell's Equations. Drawing upon the cutting-edge research of Professor Paul Huray's team of industrial engineers and graduate students, it develops the physical theory of wave propagation using methods of solid state and high-energy physics, mathematics, chemistry, and electrical engineering before addressing its application to modern high-speed systems. Coverage includes:

  • All the necessary electromagnetic theory needed for a complete understanding of signal integrity
  • Techniques for obtaining analytic solutions to Maxwell's Equations for ideal materials and boundary conditions
  • Plane electromagnetic waves
  • Plane waves in compound media
  • Transmission lines and waveguides
  • Ideal models vs. real-world systems
  • Complex permittivity of propagating media
  • Surface roughness
  • Advanced signal integrity
  • Signal integrity simulations
  • Problem sets for each chapter

With its thorough coverage of this relatively new discipline, the book serves as an ideal textbook for senior undergraduate and junior graduate students, as well as a resource for practicing engineers in this burgeoning field. At the end of each section, it typically stimulates the reader with open-ended questions that might lead to future theses or dissertation research.

About the Author
Paul G. Huray, PhD, is Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of South Carolina, where he has taught signal integrity, mathematical physics, and computer communications. Professor Huray introduced the first electromagnetics course to focus on signal integrity, and that program has produced more than eighty practicing signal integrity engineers now employed in academia, industry, and government. He earned his PhD in physics at the University of Tennessee in 1968, conducted research in the Solid State, Chemistry, and Physics Divisions at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and has worked part time for the Intel Corporation in developing the physical basis for barriers to circuits with bit rates up to 100 GHz.
Features
  • This book meets the demand of the rapidly developing education market in the area of Signal Integrity in the computer and wireless communication industries
  • Covers all the necessary electromagnetic theory needed for a complete understanding of signal integrity
  • All chapters will have problem sets and their solutions will be available in an Instructors Manual
  • Developed by the author for his graduate level course on Signal Integrity for High Speed Circiuts and for the System Bus