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The PCB Designer of the Future: Blending Innovation, Technology, and Sustainability
February 3, 2025 | Stephen V. Chavez, Siemens EDAEstimated reading time: 1 minute

The global demand for electronics is skyrocketing, fueled by rapid technological advancements and groundbreaking innovations across many industries, including automotive, telecommunications, healthcare, and consumer electronics. PCB design is the foundation of electronic hardware and lies at the heart of this evolution.
PCB design has always existed in a dynamic and ever-evolving landscape, but in the past few decades, the pace of transformation has been nothing short of revolutionary. It drives everything from smartphones and medical equipment to industrial automation and aerospace technology. PCB design is pivotal in propelling technological progress and innovation forward. This evolution in PCB design has produced multiple specialties, but I want to focus on a specific specialist known as the PCB designer (aka the printed circuit engineer). I strongly believe this profession is the true master of this domain and plays a crucial role in designing a PCB.
I have experienced the dramatic evolution of the profession and role of the PCB designer over the past few decades. I was fortunate to enter the field in the late 1980s, which means that I have never had to experience “hand taping” a PCB design. The role of the PCB designer and the PCB design process have come a long way from manual hand-taping and drafting to sophisticated computer-aided design. Today's designers are part of a high-tech field requiring technical expertise, collaborative abilities, and creative problem-solving. If I were to look into a crystal ball, I would see that the next 10 years promise even more profound changes in the tools, responsibilities, and challenges PCB designers will face.
The Changing Role of PCB Designers
PCB designers of the future will create not just layouts or place components; they will serve as system-level architects. Their work will encompass a broader range of responsibilities, requiring collaboration with hardware, software, and mechanical engineering teams. Key shifts include:
- AI-augmented creativity: AI will handle routine tasks like auto-routing and optimization, freeing designers to focus on system integration, trade-offs, what-if scenarios, and innovation.
- Sustainability advocacy: Designers will prioritize eco-friendly PCBs by selecting recyclable materials, optimizing layouts for energy efficiency, and balancing layout solvability, performance, and manufacturing with environmental concerns.
- Interdisciplinary expertise: Combining knowledge from electrical and mechanical engineering, materials science, manufacturing, and software development will be essential to navigate the complexities of next-generation technologies.
Read the rest of this article in the January 2025 issue of Design007 Magazine.
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New Issue of Design007 Magazine: Are Your Data Packages Less Than Ideal?
05/09/2025 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamWhy is it so difficult to create the ideal data package? Many of these simple errors can be alleviated by paying attention to detail—and knowing what issues to look out for. So, this month, our experts weigh in on the best practices for creating the ideal data package for your design.
RF PCB Design Tips and Tricks
05/08/2025 | Cherie Litson, EPTAC MIT CID/CID+There are many great books, videos, and information online about designing PCBs for RF circuits. A few of my favorite RF sources are Hans Rosenberg, Stephen Chavez, and Rick Hartley, but there are many more. These PCB design engineers have a very good perspective on what it takes to take an RF design from schematic concept to PCB layout.
The Right Blend: Mixed Wireless Technologies
05/08/2025 | Kirsten Zima, Siemens EDAA common trend recently is to employ as many radios as possible on a single PCB. With the increase of wireless standards and the downscaling of PCB size, it can be difficult to know what the most critical design parameters are to focus on. In this article, we’ll discuss the most important considerations to make when designing with mixed wireless technologies, such as Bluetooth, GPS, and Wi-Fi, on a single PCB. These considerations include antennas, frequencies, FCC compliance, shielding, and layout with and without transition vias.
Navigating Global Manufacturing in an Era of Uncertainty
05/07/2025 | Philip Stoten, ScoopThe EMS industry faces unprecedented challenges as global trade tensions rise and tariff announcements create market uncertainty. In an overview of IPC Europe’s podcast, MADE IN EUROPE, industry experts from GPV and Zollner examine how these developments impact our businesses and customers, and what strategies will prevail in this new landscape.
Voices of the Industry: Alpha Circuit
05/06/2025 | Marcy LaRont, PCB007 MagazinePrashant Patel, founder and president of Alpha Circuit, takes a pragmatic approach to doing business: “Commerce always wins out,” he says. How will potential tariffs and shifts in the economy affect PCB manufacturing? Prashant offers sound advice.