In automated test systems, a “load board” often provides an electrical and mechanical interface between a circuit tester of the test system and a device under test (DUT). The load board usually takes the form of a printed circuit board having one or more DUT contactors and impedance matching circuits thereon. The contactor(s) serve to mechanically hold (and provide electrical connections to) a number of DUTs, while the impedance matching circuit(s) serve to electrically couple DUT(s) held by the contactors to circuitry of the circuit tester.
At times, test equipment such as an automated DUT handler or environmental control system needs to mate to the load board of an automated test system. In the past, this has been dealt with by requiring the exterior surface of the load board to be free of obstructions. This, in turn, has forced load board designers to confine bias and impedance matching circuit(s) of the load board to the underside of the load board. However, placement of impedance matching circuit(s) on the underside of a load board can introduce a variety of design hurdles, such as: 1) signal routes may be longer, thereby increasing the likelihood of signal delay, signal skew, and signal noise; 2) vias through the load board are needed, thereby causing signals to bend at right angles and likely introducing signal reflections (not to mention that vias are typically less desirable interconnects than signal traces; and 3) termination impedances cannot be placed as close to a DUT.
In one embodiment, an article of manufacture comprises a dielectric having a top surface and a bottom surface. The top surface provides a planar surface corresponding to a mating surface of test equipment. The bottom surface has a relief pattern that is formed to straddle components extending above a surface of a load board for a circuit tester.
In yet another embodiment, a method comprises mating a dielectric plate to an exterior surface of a circuit tester load board. The dielectric plate has 1) a cutout corresponding to a DUT contactor of the load board, and 2) an underside relief pattern to straddle components of the load board that extend above an exterior surface of the load board. The method then continues with the docking of a test equipment interface to a surface of the dielectric plate opposite the load board.
Other embodiments are also disclosed.
Illustrative and presently preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawings, in which:
Coupled to each circuit tester 102 is a load board 104 for receiving one or more DUTs. The functions of each load board 104 are to 1) faithfully extend the resources of the circuit tester 102 to DUTs inserted in the load board 104, and 2) accurately reproduce any bias and impedance matching circuits required by the DUTs. If the circuit tester 102 is the afore-mentioned Agilent 93000 SOC tester, the tester's load board 104 may be carried by an articulated test head 106 that can assume either of the positions shown in
At times, an automated test system may comprise equipment that needs to dock with a circuit tester's load board 104. In
Other types of equipment may also dock with a circuit tester 102 and, in some cases, an arm or extension of the circuit tester 102 itself may dock with the circuit tester's load board 104.
As shown in
The components 304, 306, 308, 310, 312, 314, 316, 318 of the load board interface 302 typically comprise those components that are needed to implement the bias and impedance matching circuits required by a DUT (or DUTs) held by the contactors 300 of the load board 104. The components 304-318 of the load board 104 may variously comprise resistors, capacitors, inductors, hybrid circuits, power splitters, signal mixers, or other components. Some of these components 304-318 may extend beyond the surface of the load board 104. The load board 104 may also comprise electrical and mechanical connectors 320, 322, 324, 326 that extend beyond the surface of the load board 104.
In the past, the components 304-318 of a load board interface 302 have been largely confined to the underside of the load board 104, thereby providing an exterior docking surface that is free of obstructions. However, placement of impedance matching circuit(s) on the underside of a load board 104 can introduce a variety of design hurdles, such as: 1) signal routes may be longer, thereby increasing the likelihood of signal delay, signal skew, and signal noise; 2) vias through the load board 104 are needed, thereby causing signals to bend at right angles and likely introducing signal reflections (not to mention that vias are typically less desirable interconnects than signal traces; and 3) termination impedances cannot be placed as close to a DUT.
In the load board 104 shown in
The dielectric plate 400 may be formed from various materials. One suitable material is a crystalline thermoplastic polymer, such as Delrin® acetal plastic. Delrin acetal plastic has a high melting point, a high modulus of elasticity, great strength, stiffness and resistance to abrasion. Furthermore, moisture has little to no effect on Delrin, and because of this, the dimensional stability of items fabricated with close tolerances is excellent.
The dielectric plate 400 is used as shown in
This is a divisional of copending application Ser. No. 10/925,466 filed on Aug. 25, 2004, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated into this application by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10925466 | Aug 2004 | US |
Child | 11493330 | Jul 2006 | US |