This disclosure relates to an electrical connector.
Flat ribbon style cables are constructed in many formats. Elastomeric connectors can form high performance interconnection between a flex circuit cable (with its conductors that are printed on a flexible substrate) and a printed circuit board (PCB).
In contrast, ribbon cables (with conductors that are discrete wires) typically get soldered directly to the PCB or to an interface board which has a mechanical connector system for connecting to the PCB. Mechanical methods to mount the wire are also used in conjunction with hardware soldered to the PCB. These type of interconnections degrade the electrical performance of the cable to PCB system, use several separate components, and are costly to construct.
A separable connection between a wire-based cable and a PCB, which has few parts, is easy to install, and due to the controlled geometry of the cable and very thin elastomeric contact maintains the impedance of the cable up to the surface of the PCB. This assures a minimum degradation of the signal with virtually no observed loss due to the connector at frequencies from DC to above 40 GHz.
All examples and features mentioned below can be combined in any technically possible way.
In one aspect, a cable to board interconnect device that is used to interconnect wires of a wire-based cable to a printed circuit board (PCB) that has conductive traces on its essentially flat surface, where the wires are essentially parallel to the face of the PCB, includes an alignment member that overlies the wires, and an elastomeric conductor between the wires and the PCB traces.
Embodiments may include one of the following features, or any combination thereof. The elastomeric conductor may comprise a thin sheet of anisotropic conductive material. The cable to board interconnect device may further include an element to control the deflection of the elastomeric conductor while facilitating a uniform interconnection load between the wires and the PCB. The cable to board interconnect device may further include a window to allow observation of the alignment of the wires to the PCB during assembly. The alignment member may comprise a series of V-grooves that overlay the wires. The device may have an open end on the V-grooves which allows the final alignment of the wires to the PCB traces to be observed. The device may further include a strain relief member that overlies insulated portions of the cable. The alignment member and the strain relief member may both be portions of a unitary part. The unitary part may further comprise an open area between the alignment member and strain relief member. The unitary part may further comprise thin arms alongside the open area, to provide vertical compliance. The device may further include a spring component that is constructed and arranged to provide a spring force that pushes the alignment member against the wires and compresses the elastomeric conductor. The spring component may comprise a leaf spring, or a bar with separate springs.
In another aspect, a cable to board interconnect device that is used to interconnect wires to a printed circuit board (PCB) that has conductive traces on its essentially flat surface, where the wires are essentially parallel to the face of the PCB, includes an alignment member that overlies the wires, wherein the alignment member comprises a series of grooves that overlay the wires, a strain relief member that overlies insulated portions of the cable, wherein the alignment member and the strain relief member are both portions of a unitary part, and a thin sheet of anisotropic conductive material between the wires and the PCB traces.
Embodiments may include one of the above and/or below features, or any combination thereof. The alignment member grooves may be V-grooves. The device may further include an element to control the deflection of the elastomeric conductor while facilitating a uniform interconnection load between the wires and the PCB. The device may further include a window to allow observation of the alignment of the wires to the PCB during assembly. The device may have an open end on the V-grooves which allows the final alignment of the wires to the PCB traces to be observed. The unitary part may further comprise an open area between the alignment member and strain relief member. The unitary part may further comprise thin arms alongside the open area, to provide vertical compliance. The unitary part may be molded from plastic.
One embodiment of the cable-to-board connector comprises an integrated strain relief and alignment member, a backing plate, a compression load member, screws, and a strip of Anisotropic Conductive Elastomer (ACE). ACE is a compliant material that electrically conducts in one dimension but not the others. A thin sheet of ACE can conduct through its thickness but essentially does not conduct in the other two dimensions. ACE is a well-known material, is described in several patents including U.S. Pat. No. 4,644,101, and is commercially available as PariPoser™ from Paricon Technologies Corp. of Taunton, Mass., USA.
Cable-to-board connector 10,
The integrated strain relief and wire alignment member can be (but need not be) a single molded plastic part 20 as shown in
The molded plastic member (which may be made from materials other than plastic) may also contain a window (an opening) 45 allowing the cable to be inspected during assembly. The window is not necessary to the functions of the wire to board contact or cable strain relief, so is not required. The window, coupled with a thinned area in the arms 43 connecting the strain relief to the wire control structure allows the wire control to be rigid in the plane of the PCB and flexible to move perpendicular to the board. This helps to assure that the load applied to the wires is not significantly impacted by the stiffness of the plastic member.
There can be a flat area 52 between each wire control “v” groove 49 in portion 42 of the compression load member. This is designed to control the compression of the elastomeric strip as well as maintaining the pressure of the wire 54—elastomer 30—PCB trace 56 interface. In practice, the flat area pinches the elastomer to the surface of the board and pushes or extrudes the elastomer into the wire-containing groove 49. At the same time, the elastomer under the wire is extruded outward causing the ACE to flow around the wire into the space between the wire and groove wall, as is shown in
This embodiment uses an Anisotropic Conducting Elastomer (ACE) which only conducts perpendicular to its surface, resulting in high insulation resistance between wires. When using the same hardware but excluding the ACE (i.e., direct wire to PCB trace contact), the quality of the contact is poor and open circuits are common. Measured data showed that open contacts occurred for a significant number of the wires in the cable. For example, in one test the same 40 wire ribbon cable was connected to a PCB with and without the ACE (using the same cable-to-board connector shown in
Connector Assembly
The cable insulation is stripped and the wires are optionally formed similar to those shown in
The strip of ACE is placed over the contact zone of the pads. The plastic member is fit to the cable and the strain relief loosely mounted to the backing plate. The cable is slid forward until the insulation contacts the window side of the wire grooves thus setting the axial position of the cable to the board. The wires will typically protrude past the alignment member and over the exposed PCB traces. This will allow visualization of proper wire/trace alignment. If necessary, the plane of the wires can be rotated such that the wires are over the PCB contact pads (e.g., the PCB traces) with the ACE between the pads and the wires. The spring member is placed on top of the plastic between the two front screw holes. The front screws are tightened into threaded holes in the backing plate providing a uniform compressive load to the array of wires. The rear screws are fully tightened to provide a quality strain relief. The wires are easily visualized through the window, allowing the opportunity to check that the wires are in proper alignment with the board traces.
Additional Options
A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that additional modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the inventive concepts described herein, and, accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2017/057754 | 10/21/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2018/075986 | 4/26/2018 | WO | A |
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