SPICE Simulation
What Is SPICE Simulation?
SPICE (Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis) is the foundational circuit simulation methodology used throughout the electronics industry to predict how a circuit will behave before it is physically built. SPICE simulators solve the mathematical equations that describe the electrical behavior of each component in the circuit — resistors, capacitors, inductors, transistors, diodes, and ICs — calculating voltages, currents, and waveforms across the circuit under various operating conditions. Common SPICE tools include LTspice, PSpice, Spectre, and ngspice.
In PCB design workflows, SPICE simulation is used to validate circuit functionality at the schematic level, optimize component values, analyze power supply stability, verify signal integrity through transmission line models, and predict worst-case operating conditions. However, SPICE simulation accuracy depends on the fidelity of the component models and the inclusion of parasitic elements introduced by the PCB layout — trace resistance, via inductance, and board capacitance. This creates a feedback loop between simulation and layout that ideally drives iterative refinement of both.
Bridging Simulation and Layout With AI
The traditional workflow treats SPICE simulation and PCB layout as sequential steps with manual feedback loops. When simulation results suggest a layout change, or when layout parasitics require re-simulation, engineers must manually iterate between the two domains. Physics-driven AI layout tools that incorporate electrical models during generation begin to close this gap — evaluating the electrical consequences of placement and routing decisions in real time rather than requiring separate post-layout simulation. This tighter integration between physical design and electrical analysis accelerates convergence on a design that meets both simulation targets and physical constraints.






