Electrical Engineering & Electronics

Stripline Impedance Calculator

Estimate stripline characteristic impedance from trace width, dielectric height, copper thickness, and dielectric constant.

mm
mm
um
Stripline Impedance (ohm)
44.282
Effective Trace Width0.335 mm
Estimate NoteApproximate stripline value; controlled impedance should be confirmed against the actual stackup.

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Quick Answer

Use the Stripline Impedance Calculator to estimate stripline characteristic impedance from trace width, dielectric height, copper thickness, and dielectric constant. In plain terms, enter Trace Width (mm), Dielectric Height (mm), Copper Thickness (um), Dielectric Constant (dimensionless) and the calculator returns Estimated stripline characteristic impedance with supporting values where the formula produces them.

This page is built for PCB designers, embedded hardware engineers, RF layout reviewers, manufacturing engineers, and students checking board-level estimates. It is most useful for controlled-impedance planning, trace-current screening, via-current estimates, coax checks, and fabricator stackup conversations. The calculator keeps the units visible, shows the governing equation, and separates formula math from design approval.

Formula

Z060εrln(4h0.67πweff)\begin{aligned} Z_0 \approx \frac{60}{\sqrt{\varepsilon_r}}\ln\left(\frac{4h}{0.67\pi w_{eff}}\right) \end{aligned}

Where:
Z0=
Estimated stripline characteristic impedance
h=
Dielectric spacing
weffw_eff=
Effective trace width

The formula block above is the calculation used by the tool. The variable list below the equation defines the symbols in the same context as the calculator fields, so you can audit the math before relying on the result.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter each known value using the unit printed beside the field. For this calculator, common starting inputs include Trace Width (mm), Dielectric Height (mm), Copper Thickness (um), Dielectric Constant (dimensionless).
  2. Check whether the values come from a datasheet, a field measurement, a nameplate, a drawing, a standard, or an assumption.
  3. Read the primary output first, then review the secondary rows for current, power, gain, loss, impedance, duty cycle, margin, or design notes.
  4. Change one input at a time when comparing alternatives. This makes sensitivity checks easier and shows which assumption controls the result.
  5. Save or share the calculator URL after entering non-default values if you need a repeatable calculation record.

Inputs and Units

InputUnitDefaultWhy it matters
Trace Widthmm0.3Defines geometry, construction, or count data that strongly affects the result.
Dielectric Heightmm0.8Represents a component property, coefficient, or model assumption that should come from reliable data.
Copper Thicknessum35Defines geometry, construction, or count data that strongly affects the result.
Dielectric Constantdimensionless4.2Represents a component property, coefficient, or model assumption that should come from reliable data.

Example Workflow

A practical workflow is to start with the default values, replace Trace Width with your project value in mm, then update the remaining inputs from a datasheet, schematic, cable schedule, stackup note, field reading, link budget, or specification. After the result updates, compare it with an independent hand check and with any project limit that applies to the same operating condition.

For a quick check, the default inputs give you a complete worked context for Stripline Impedance. If a small input change moves the answer sharply, treat that input as a design driver and verify its source before moving on.

Result Interpretation

The primary result is Estimated stripline characteristic impedance. For PCB and transmission lines, use the result for early layout screening, then confirm with the board fabricator, field-solver methods, actual stackup data, copper tolerance, solder mask, and thermal environment. A result that looks unexpectedly high, low, or sensitive to a small input change is usually a signal to check units, assumptions, boundary conditions, and the valid range of the equation.

Use this output as a transparent calculation, not as a hidden design decision. For safety-critical, regulated, high-power, high-frequency, or production work, document the input source, the formula assumption, the applicable standard, and the review path.

Assumptions and Limits

  • The dielectric constant, copper thickness, geometry, layer type, and temperature-rise limit match the board stackup being checked.
  • Etch tolerance, plating thickness, solder mask, roughness, return path, airflow, adjacent copper, and connector launch effects are not fully modelled.
  • The result is an estimate for review and communication, not a controlled-impedance coupon or qualification report.
  • The calculator does not add hidden safety factors, derating curves, compliance checks, inspection requirements, or manufacturer-specific limits.

Common Mistakes

  • Using a trace-width or impedance estimate without the actual PCB stackup.
  • Ignoring copper tolerance, plating, solder mask, temperature rise, return path, and via barrel geometry.
  • Treating empirical current formulas as final approval for safety-critical or high-reliability boards.
  • Copying the calculated value into production without checking the nearest real component, cable, trace, fuse, connector, antenna, optical part, or datasheet limit.

References and Further Checks

These references are useful for context and validation, but the calculator itself remains a simplified formula tool:

For final engineering decisions, compare the result with governing codes, manufacturer data, site-specific measurements, lab testing, and qualified professional judgment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Use the displayed formula to calculate estimated stripline characteristic impedance from dielectric spacing, and effective trace width. Enter the calculator inputs in the units shown beside each field, then compare the primary result, Estimated stripline characteristic impedance, with your project limit, datasheet value, or independent hand check.

The calculator uses Trace Width (mm), Dielectric Height (mm), Copper Thickness (um), Dielectric Constant (dimensionless). Each field has a fixed visible unit or choice so the formula can be checked consistently and repeated without guessing the measurement basis.

The dielectric constant, copper thickness, geometry, layer type, and temperature-rise limit match the board stackup being checked. The simplified equation also assumes the physical circuit, installation, stackup, link, or component behaves like the model shown on this page.

Start with Estimated stripline characteristic impedance. The most important terms to verify are Estimated stripline characteristic impedance; Dielectric spacing; Effective trace width. If the value changes sharply after a small input change, run a sensitivity check and verify the governing assumption before using the result.

No. Use it as an educational, troubleshooting, or early engineering check. Final work should be reviewed against applicable codes, standards, manufacturer data, measurements, test results, and qualified professional judgment.