My two cents. With a double sided board a single ground plane is preferable to a split plane AS LONG AS THE high speed digital is routed away from the analog and is over contiguous copper that allows the return current to flow undisturbed back to its source (check those vias, only find one for the return current is a sure noise source. Add multiple parallel vias to reduce the inductance). A good source for an overview of using ground planes the better way is:
I have taken over a half dozen in plant courses from Henry and consider them some of the easiest understood quidelines for board layout/noise reduction. Split planes can work but under NO Circumstances should digital run over the analog return plane or vice versa. Any signals that need to be shared between these sections require some type of isolated coupling (optical, magnetic, etc.).
THE OVERRIDING DETAIL IS THAT ANY CURRENT SOURCED MUST HAVE ITS RETURN PATH BE AS LOW AN INDUCTANCE AS POSSIBLE. ANY DEVIATIONS FROM THIS RESULTS IN A GRADIENT BEING DEVELOPED WHICH WILL GENERATE A DIFFERENTIAL SIGNAL LEADING TO NOISE OR EMI EMISSIONS. THAT MEANS THE GROUND PLANE MUST BE UNIFORM WITHOUT SLOTS, REMOVED AREAS, OR ANYTHING THAT WILL FORCE A RETURN CURRENT TO HAVE TO DETOUR FROM FOLLWING BACK, ITS OUTGOING SIGNAL TRACE. Please check Henry's site, he explains it so much better.
For the capacitors, once again it is the inductance that causes the capacitors to stop working at elevated frequencies. Need more capacitance? Parallel them in an ARRAY about your point to both lower the ESR of the caps as well as the ESL (equivalent series inductance) which is the critical aspect.
However, for RF power distribution, consider using the combination of a pi input, L section output filter configuration, where each section of your RF design has its own unique L section to deliver the 5v.
Pi Filter L Section
L1 L2
----00000------- ---00000---
| | | |
_ _ _ _
-C1 -C2 -C3 - C4
| | | |
V V V V
Typical values for
C1=100 - 1000 uF (Load current/ripple voltage dependent)
C2=1-10 uf Tantalum (doesn't tolerate negative voltages well)
C3=1000 - 5000 pF (Silver Mica)
C4=100 - 1000 pF (Silver Mica) (noise related)
L1= 10 - 100 mH (Ripple voltage/load current dependent)
L2= 50-500 uH (noise related).
Thus you have ONE Pi section and as many L sections as you have RF points to apply 5v to. Check out the ARRL site for more in depth and better information
Good Luck,
Jim