yungman,
In an attempt to converge onto some common ground where we can (dis-)agree on specifics, I've quoted and paraphrased you on nine specific points which I hope we could deal with (some of them are unimportant).
1) He has 16 channel of the same circuit, it is not going to be 10cm^2. It is going to be much bigger.
I'm not sure why you think this is going to be such a large PCB, but you'll have to do a pretty bad job (size wise) to invalidate the point about the interplane capacitance being only a few nF and thus negligible at moderately low frequencies.
16 times the circuit shown is not going to be 10cm X 10cm. Do you even layout pcb? I do a lot with 0603 layout.
2) Close coupling between the top signal layer and the adjacent ground plane is not important. It only affects the Z0 of the line. Signal-to-plane separation is only important when signals change layers.
This is generally false. I've already mentioned crosstalk. Other benefits from tight coupling is reduced loop areas and hence differential-mode radiation, and also reduced ground plane inductance which reduces common-mode radiation from your cables.
You are missing the moon, point is everything matter, cross talk matter, BUT, on the same layer, cross talk ONLY become significant if you run trace in parallel for any significant distance. If you break the image path, you create much bigger problem. Of cause if you do real layout, you use common sense not to run critical signal trace closely in parallel with other traces for a long distance. This is just common sense!
Remember EMF=-\frac {d\Phi}{dt} where \Phi=BS. In a microstrip,
the image current follow tightly under the top trace even at frequency under 1MHz. The area S is only the length of the trace times the separation. say you have a 2" trace and 30mil separation, the area for sensing the external field is 0.06 sq in. That is not much area and the area is perpendicular to surface of the board. so it only sensitive to magnetic field parallel to the board. How can you compare with the loop caused by ground image current break and also the loop area is parallel to the surface of the board?
3) There's no radiation from microstrip because the EM wave is mostly contained in the guided structure. The only time there is an emission is when there is a disruption of the return path.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microstrip_antenna
Do you know about image current when you break the path of the return current?
4) If the signal trace doesn't go through layers, the only thing to worry about is the spread of current density on the ground plane.
I'm suspecting my reading comprehension is letting me down, but I'm reading this as "No via = no EMI problems", which you probably don't mean.
EVERYTHING CAN CAUSE PROBLEM. Just how bad it is.
5) The only time noise coupling occurs is when you run a trace parallel along the signal trace.
Which you will invariably do when you route sixteen channels on a PCB. This crosstalk depends on trace-to-trace and trace-to-plane separation, which is an argument for tight coupling between the trace layer and the adjacent plane layer.
6) It is much better to use power trace than to have cut plane if you are not taking the precaution. Don't just cut the plane thinking it is better, it is not.
Why is it much better? What's the difference? Doing the critical routing on L1 means that the split power plane on L3 is not a reference plane, and hence splitting the power plane on L3 is unproblematic.
The reason is because a power trace is much narrower, it you cross under a microstrip, it disturb a very narrow section ( 50mils) and the microstrip continue again. So it is only a slight disturbance.
7) It sure don't look like opamp symbol and the circuit don't look like a simple opamp circuit.
I was making a joke at the expense of whoever drew that symbol, and at the same time I was telling you that the device in question is AD8227.
I KNOW WHAT YOU TOLD ME! I said this is a post for layout, not a circuit. I am not going to spend effort to study the circuit deeply and I was not going to comment on that part. The post is question about power routing.
8) If the plane is farther from the center of the stack up, the board will warp. There is no way out of this. You design the stack up so the planes are symmetrical so there will be no net pulling to one direction.
Warping has nothing to do with the L1-L2 separation because the solution is trivially, like you say and I did in my last post, a symmetric stackup.
Ask any pcb designer, every pcb designer know that you do plane stack up in symmetrical way to avoid warping. We are talking about no power plane and you suggested to put the ground up close to the top.
9) I would put as much signal trace at the bottom layer as possible because I don't even want the trace to have any interaction with the components on the top layer. I would not put most of the trace on the top layer. Let the ground plane insulate the trace from the components.
This is horrible advice in my opinion. If you're worried about coupling between the top layer components and traces, then use guard fill gnd areas on that layer. Why introduce extra via pairs on all of your critical signals and route them on a layer that has no adjacent reference plane? Increased loop areas, etc..
That might have some validity, I was thinking about through hole components.
10) The op already said he is going to forgo the power plane and use power trace instead. I think this is a much better and safer way. Don't put the ground close to the top.
What? No plane on L3, but you still don't want tight L1-L2 coupling?? That doesn't make sense.
Layer 3 can be used for trace, for a 60mil board, you put ground say 25mil below top layer, you have 25/35mil split, warping is not going to be a problem and you have ground for each side.
Ok, hope that covers it. I'm looking forward to your reply and maybe I'll learn something new! Cheers.