Also, what do you guys think of capacitor bypass sequencing? (http://www.sigcon.com/Pubs/news/9_07.htm). In terms of isolating rest of the system from "noisy" components. It's very hard to find info on the topic, even harder to find a source with measurements. Most sources either provide "best practices" without going into details, or provide only theory, but not practical measurements, which makes it suspicious for me as I've seen people go very far in delusions (e.g., audiopholery).
Ineffectual, for similar reasons as the, aherm, discussion, above. Which, I'm certain my explanation will get misinterpreted just as poorly...
The attenuation from pin to plane, for either connection shown, is minuscule. The trace connected one will have a little more than the other. It is easy to calculate what the cutoff frequency will be (given some other assumptions), and subsequent impedance peak seen at the IC pin.
The real question is, are those values -- the impedance and frequency -- meaningful? Are they desired? Do they meet a specification? If so, what?
Note that there are two different goals:
1. The impedance at one port of the PDN (power distribution network)
2. The attenuation from that port to other ports (examples: other device power pins, conducted EMI on cables, radiated EMI to space).
In general, simply having a low supply impedance at a pin will give good attenuation for a given current: V = I*Z. But it's a zeroth order relation: it doesn't have any scaling or anything, it is what it is.
If you can't brute-force the impedance, and your attempts to do so are frustrated by unintended resonances (leading to peaks in pin impedance, and peaks in transmission through the network), you will have found the limit of that method.
To do better, you need to design the filter. Specify port impedances, and the minimum attenuation over some frequency range. Notice zero and infinity are NOT valid inputs to this process! You are therefore forced to consider what impedances and attenuations are actually required, and have to consider what is actually possible. A meaningful process ensues, and component values and trace/plane geometry can be solved for.
To put it differently:
The above article is wrong, in a completely separate way. The question we must ask is, not whether one or the other is better, but what are the properties of both, and how can we design those properties?
The simplest way to get high attenuation -- good filtering between ports -- is to use inductors, or CLC ladders; lowpass filters in general -- to connect between them. The impedance of these filters must be suitable for the source and load, and the cutoff and attenuation are defined by the frequencies and attenuation of interest. Additionally, we should give some thought to grounding (avoiding ground loops) and shielding, particularly when the desired attenuation is very large (say >60-80dB).
With a fully specified procedure, we have no fear of encountering the situation that a naive designer might find themselves in when they, say, randomly pepper 100uH chokes throughout a design -- sure the attenuation might be great, but the impedance is massive, and must either be balanced by generous bulk filter caps (lossy ones at that), or employed only for high impedance loads. And with a "random peppering", the attenuation attained might be all over the board -- excessive (wasteful of BOM cost and board area) in some areas, yet insufficient in others.
This is equally valid at 60Hz as it is at 60GHz.
Tim