English
Noun
- the primary circuit
board of a personal
computer, containing the circuitry for the central
processing unit, keyboard, mouse and monitor, together with slots for other devices
Translations
- Estonian: emaplaat
- Finnish: emolevy
- French: carte mère
- Icelandic: móðurborð
- Italian: scheda madre
- Japanese: マザーボード
- Polish: płyta główna
- Russian: материнская плата, мама
- Spanish: placa base, motherboard
- Swedish: moderkort
seealso
PC
motherboard A motherboard is the central or primary
circuit
board (PCB) making up a complex electronic system, such as a
modern
computer. It is
also known as a mainboard, baseboard, system board, planar board,
or, on
Apple
computers, a
logic board,
and is sometimes abbreviated casually as mobo.
Most motherboards produced today are designed for
so-called
IBM-compatible
computers, which held over 96% of the global
personal
computer market in 2005. Motherboards for IBM-compatible
computers are specifically covered in the
PC
motherboard article.
A motherboard, like a
backplane, provides the
electrical connections by which the other components of the system
communicate, but unlike a backplane also contains the central
processing unit and other subsystems such as real time clock, and
some peripheral interfaces.
A typical
desktop
computer is built with the
microprocessor,
main
memory, and other essential components on the motherboard.
Other components such as
external
storage, controllers for
video display
and
sound, and
peripheral devices
are typically attached to the motherboard via
edge
connectors and cables, although in modern computers it is
increasingly common to integrate these "peripherals" into the
motherboard.
Components and functions
The motherboard of a typical
desktop consists of a large
printed
circuit board. It holds electronic components and
interconnects, as well as physical connectors (sockets, slots, and
headers) into which other
computer components may be inserted or attached.
Most motherboards include, at a minimum:
- sockets (or
slots) in which one or more microprocessors (CPUs) are installed
- slots into which the system's main memory is installed
(typically in the form of DIMM modules
containing
DRAM chips)
- a chipset which
forms an interface between the CPU's front-side
bus, main memory, and peripheral buses
- non-volatile
memory chips (usually Flash ROM in
modern motherboards) containing the system's firmware or BIOS
- a clock
generator which produces the system clock signal
to synchronize the various components
- slots for expansion cards (these interface to the system via
the buses supported by the chipset)
- power connectors and circuits, which receive electrical power
from the computer
power supply and distribute it to the CPU, chipset, main
memory, and expansion cards.
Additionally, nearly all motherboards include
logic and connectors to support commonly-used input devices, such
as
PS/2
connectors for a
mouse and
keyboard. Early
personal
computers such as the
Apple II or
IBM PC
included only this minimal peripheral support on the motherboard.
Occasionally video interface hardware was also integrated into the
motherboard; for example on the Apple II, and rarely on
IBM-comatible computers such as the
IBM PC Jr.
Additional peripherals such as
disk
controllers and
serial ports
were provided as expansion cards.
Given the high
thermal
design power of high-speed computer CPUs and components, modern
motherboards nearly always include
heatsinks and mounting points
for
fans to
dissipate excess heat.
Integrated peripherals
With the steadily declining costs and size of
integrated
circuits, it is now possible to include support for many
peripherals on the
motherboard. By combining many functions on one PCB, the physical
size and total cost of the system may be reduced; highly-integrated
motherboards are thus especially popular in
small
form factor and budget computers.
For example, the ECS RS485M-M, a typical modern
budget motherboard for computers based on
AMD
processors, has on-board support for a very large range of
peripherals:
Expansion cards to support all of these functions
would have cost hundreds of dollars even a decade ago, however
as of
April 2007 such highly-integrated motherboards are available
for as little as $30 in the USA.
Temperature and reliability
Motherboards are generally
air cooled
with
heat
sinks often mounted on larger chips, such as the northbridge,
in modern motherboards. Passive cooling, or a single fan mounted on
the power supply, was sufficient for many desktop computer CPUs
until the late 1990s; since then, most have required
CPU fans mounted
on their heatsinks, due to rising clock speeds and power
consumption. Most motherboards have connectors for additional case
fans as well. Newer motherboards have integrated temperature
sensors to detect motherboard and CPU temperatures, and
controllable fan connectors which the
BIOS or
operating
system can use to regulate fan speed.
Some
small
form factor computers and
home
theater PCs designed for quiet and energy-efficient operation
boast fan-less designs. This typically requires the use of a
low-power CPU, as well as careful layout of the motherboard and
other components to allow for heat sink placement.
A 2003 study found that some spurious computer
crashes and general reliability issues, ranging from screen image
distortions to I/O read/write errors, can be attributed not to
software or peripheral hardware but to aging
capacitors on PC
motherboards. Ultimately this was shown to be the result of a
faulty electrolyte formulation.
- For more information on premature capacitor failure on PC
motherboards, see capacitor
plague.
Motherboards use
electrolytic
capacitors to filter the DC power distributed around the board.
These capacitors age at a temperature-dependent rate, as their
water based
electrolytes slowly
evaporate. This can lead to loss of capacitance and subsequent
motherboard malfunctions due to
voltage instabilities. While
most capacitors are rated for 2000 hours of operation at 105
°C, their
expected design life roughly doubles for every 10
°C below this. At
45
°C a
lifetime of 15 years can be expected. This appears reasonable for a
computer motherboard, however many manufacturers have delivered
substandard capacitors, which significantly reduce this life
expectancy. Inadequate case cooling and elevated temperatures
easily exacerbate this problem. It is possible, but tedious and
time-consuming, to find and replace failed capacitors on PC
motherboards; it is less expensive to buy a new motherboard than to
pay for such a repair.
History
Prior to the advent of the
microprocessor, a
computer was usually built in a card-cage case or
mainframe
with components connected by a
backplane consisting of a set
of slots themselves connected with wires; in very old designs the
wires were discrete connections between card connector pins, but
printed-circuit boards soon became the standard practice. The
central processing
unit, memory and peripherals were housed on individual printed
circuit boards which plugged into the backplane.
During the late 1980s and 1990s, it became
economical to move an increasing number of peripheral functions
onto the motherboard (
see
above). In the late 1980s, motherboards began to include single
ICs (called
Super I/O
chips) capable of supporting a set of low-speed peripherals:
keyboard, mouse, floppy disk drive, serial ports, and parallel
ports. As of the late 1990s, many personal computer motherboards
support a full range of audio, video, storage, and networking
functions without the need for any expansion cards at all;
higher-end systems for 3D gaming and
computer
graphics typically retain only the graphics card as a separate
component.
The early pioneers of motherboard manufacturing
were Micronics, Mylex, AMI, DTK, Hauppauge, Orchid Technology,
Elitegroup, DFI, and a number of Taiwan-based manufacturers.
Popular personal computers such as the Apple II
and IBM PC had published schematic diagrams and other documentation
which permitted rapid reverse-engineering and third-party
replacement motherboards. Usually intended for building new
computers compatible with the exemplars, many motherboards offered
additional performance or other features and were used to upgrade
the manufacturer's original equipment.
Bootstrapping using the BIOS
Motherboards contain some
non-volatile memory to initialize the system and load an
operating
system from some external peripheral device. Microcomputers
such as the Apple II and IBM PC used
read-only memory chips,
mounted in sockets on the motherboard. At power up the central
processor would load its program counter with the address of the
boot ROM and start executing ROM instructions, which would in turn
start loading memory from an external peripheral device (disk
drive).
Most modern motherboard designs use a
BIOS, stored in a
EEPROM
chip soldered to the motherboard, to
bootstrap the motherboard. (Socketed BIOS chips are widely used,
also.) By booting the motherboard, the memory, circuitry, and
peripherals are tested and configured. This process is known as a
Power
On Self Test or POST. Errors during POST result in POST error
codes, ranging from simple audible beeps from the speaker to
complex diagnostic messages displayed on the
video
monitor.
The BIOS often requires configuration settings to
be stored on the motherboard. Since configuration settings must be
easily edited, these settings are often stored in non-volatile
RAM (
NVRAM) rather than in
some sort of read-only memory (
ROM). When a user makes
configuration changes or alters the date and time of the computer,
this small NVRAM circuit stores the data. Typically, a small,
long-lasting
battery
(e.g. a
lithium coin
cell CR2032) is used to keep the NVRAM "refreshed" for many
years. Therefore, a failing battery on a motherboard will produce
the symptoms of a computer that cannot determine the correct date
and time, nor remember what hardware configuration the user has
selected. The BIOS itself is unaffected by the status of the
battery.
When
IBM first introduced
the
PC in
the
1980s,
imitations were quite common. (The physical parts which made up the
motherboard were trivial to acquire.) However, the imitations were
never successful until the IBM
ROM BIOS was
legally copied. To understand why copying the BIOS was an important
step, consider that the BIOS contained vital instructions which
interacted with peripherals. Without these software instructions in
the BIOS, a PC would not function properly. (In most modern
computer operating systems, the
BIOS is bypassed for
most hardware functions, but in the 1980s, the BIOS served many
vital low-level functions.)
So when
Compaq Computer
Corp. spent US$1 million to clone the IBM BIOS using
reverse
engineering, they became an elite computer manufacturer of IBM
PC Clones. Phoenix Technology soon matched their feat and began
reselling BIOSes to other clone makers. It has been noted that
Microsoft
was more than happy to license the operating system (
DOS), and IBM was more
than happy to sue companies that violated the copyright of their
BIOS. But by documenting and publicizing the reverse engineering of
the BIOS, Compaq and Phoenix were legally competing with IBM using
their own
copyrighted BIOS.
Once the bootstrapping of the computer's
peripherals are complete, the BIOS will normally pass control to
another set of instructions stored on a bootable device.
Devices which are normally used to boot a
computer:
Any of the above devices can be stored with
machine
code instructions to load an
operating
system or a
program.
Form factors
Motherboards are produced in a variety of
sizes and shapes ("
form
factors"), some of which are specific to individual
computer manufacturers. However, the motherboards used in
IBM-compatible
commodity
computers have been standardized to fit various
case sizes.
As of
2007, most
desktop
computer motherboards use one of these standard form
factors—even those found in
Macintosh and
Sun
computers which have not traditionally been built from commodity
components.
Laptop computers
generally use highly integrated, miniaturized, and customized
motherboards. This is one of the reasons that laptop computers are
difficult to upgrade and expensive to repair. Often the failure of
one laptop component requires the replacement of the entire
motherboard, which is usually more expensive than a desktop
motherboard due to the large number of integrated components.
Notes
motherboard in Arabic: لوحة أم
motherboard in Bosnian: Matična ploča
motherboard in Breton: Pennwal
motherboard in Bulgarian: Дънна платка
motherboard in Catalan: Placa mare
motherboard in Czech: Základní deska
motherboard in Danish: Bundkort
motherboard in German: Hauptplatine
motherboard in Estonian: Emaplaat
motherboard in Modern Greek (1453-): Μητρική
κάρτα
motherboard in Spanish: Placa base
motherboard in Esperanto: Ĉeftabulo
motherboard in Basque: Txartel nagusi
motherboard in Persian: برد مادر
motherboard in French: Carte mère
motherboard in Western Frisian: Memmeboerd
motherboard in Friulian: Schede mari
motherboard in Irish: Máthairchlár
motherboard in Galician: Placa base
motherboard in Korean: 주기판
motherboard in Croatian: Matična ploča
motherboard in Indonesian: Papan induk
motherboard in Icelandic: Móðurborð
motherboard in Italian: Scheda madre
motherboard in Hebrew: לוח אם
motherboard in Georgian: დედაპლატა
motherboard in Latvian: Mātes plate
motherboard in Lithuanian: Pagrindinė
plokštė
motherboard in Hungarian: Alaplap
motherboard in Malayalam: മദര്ബോഡ്
motherboard in Malay (macrolanguage): Papan
induk
motherboard in Dutch: Moederbord
motherboard in Japanese: マザーボード
motherboard in Norwegian: Hovedkort
motherboard in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Hovudkort
motherboard in Polish: Płyta główna
motherboard in Portuguese: Placa-mãe
motherboard in Russian: Материнская плата
motherboard in Albanian: Karta e zërit
motherboard in Simple English: Motherboard
motherboard in Slovak: Matičná doska
motherboard in Slovenian: Matična plošča
motherboard in Serbian: Матична плоча
motherboard in Serbo-Croatian: Matična
ploča
motherboard in Finnish: Emolevy
motherboard in Swedish: Moderkort
motherboard in Thai: เมนบอร์ด
motherboard in Vietnamese: Bo mạch chủ
motherboard in Turkish: Ana kart
motherboard in Ukrainian: Материнська
плата
motherboard in Vlaams: Moederbord
motherboard in Yiddish: מוטער פלאטע
motherboard in Chinese: 主板