The present invention relates to a contact element and, more particularly, to a contact element having an electrically conductive layer and a masking layer.
Contact elements for electric plug connectors have high plug-in forces, which result in wear of the contact element, especially if relative movements between the contact element and a counter contact element occur. In miniaturized plug connectors and in plug connectors having a plurality of contact elements, such as contact pins, the necessary plug-in forces for obtaining a final plug state of the plug connector are high. Contact surfaces of the plug connectors have limited wear resistance and are generally stationary contact surfaces for which a necessary plug-in force increases as a number of contact elements increases.
Lubrication can be applied to the contact elements or mechanical assistance such as levers can be used to lower the plug-in forces necessary to reach the final plug state. Mechanical assistance, however, renders the plug connector more complicated and more expensive, while lubrication must also meet requirements for shelf life and temperature stability.
Contact elements can have noble metals, such as gold, silver, palladium, or tin, on an entire contact surface of the contact element. These metal coatings increase the resistivity of the contact element against corrosion without remarkably reducing the electric conductivity of the contact element. These noble metals, however, are precious metals and increase the cost of the plug connectors.
A contact element comprises an electrically conductive layer and a masking layer. A contact side of the contact element is at least partly covered by the masking layer and the electrically conductive layer. The electrically conductive layer and the masking layer form a contact surface having alternating regions of the masking layer and the electrically conductive layer.
The invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying Figures, of which:
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described hereinafter in detail with reference to the attached drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements. The present invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as being limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that the present disclosure will be thorough and complete and will fully convey the concept of the disclosure to those skilled in the art.
A first embodiment 7 and a second embodiment 9 of a contact element 1 are shown in a top view 3 and a sectional side view 5 in
The electrically conductive layer 17 includes a plurality of portions 19 constituting the electrically conductive layer 17. The portions 19 of the electrically conductive layer 17 correspond to unmasked regions 37. In the first embodiment 7 shown in
As shown in
In the embodiments of
A third embodiment 10 of the contact element 1 is shown in a sectional side view 5 in
In the third embodiment 10, as shown in
The masking layer 15, in the third embodiment 10 shown in
The polymer 45 used for the masking layer 15 may be designed for different applications, for instance, for different temperature ranges in which the contact element 1 may be applied as well as ambient conditions like humidity, electromagnetic radiation, or atmosphere. The polymer 45 may be any commercially available polymer, such as PMMA, PE, PVC, PET, PC, PET, PU or similar, suitable for receiving the lubricating filler medium 47.
The electrically conductive filler medium 48 and/or the lubricating filler medium 47 may be provided in the polymer 45 prior to masking of the substrate 13 with the masking layer 15. In another embodiment, the electrically conductive filler medium 48 and/or the lubricating filler medium 47 may be incorporated into the masking layer 15 after masking the substrate 13 with the masking layer 15. Incorporation of said filler media 47, 48 may be performed by assimilation, implantation, absorption or adsorption. The filler media 47, 48 may be homogeneously provided in the masking layer 15 or solely in a top portion of the masking layer 15, wherein the top portion is to be understood as the part of the masking layer farthest away from the substrate 13.
The substrate 13 is made of copper 49 or a copper alloy 51. Copper or a copper alloy yield low ohmic resistance, a high electric conductivity, and may be easily manufactured, however, copper shows the tendency of oxidation in ambient air and is, due to its hardness, not suitable for repeated plug-in operations. The copper or copper alloy of the substrate 13 is therefore at least partly covered by the masking layer 15 and the electrically conductive layer 17.
The portions 19 of the electrically conductive layer 17 contain a contact material 53 which is different than a material of the substrate 13. The contact material 53 of the electrically conductive layer 17 may be a noble metal 59 or tin 61. The noble metal 59 may be gold, silver, palladium, or a less toxic heavy metal such as tin 61. A copper alloy of different composition than the substrate 13 may be used as material for the electrically conductive layer 17. The material of the intermediate layer 33, in the shown embodiment, contains nickel 55 or a nickel alloy 57. Application of nickel 55 or nickel alloy 57 as the intermediate layer 33 increases the effective hardness 63 of the electrically conductive layer 17.
The contact surface 32 mechanically abuts a counter contact surface during a plug-in operation. The masking layer 15 is in mechanical contact with the counter contact surface, but the contact force is exerted through the portions 19 of the electrically conductive layer 17. The material of the masking layer 15 including the lubricating filler medium 47 is not displaced by the counter contact surface but is still in mechanical contact with it. The masking layer 15, with the polymer 45 as described above, can therefore lubricate the contact surface 32 for reducing the plug-in forces and provide an additional electrical connection with the counter contact surface.
A process for forming the contact element 1 shown in the embodiments 7 and 9 in
In a spraying 65 technique, shown in
In a printing 66 technique, shown in
The spraying 65 and printing 66 techniques are pressure based. In a dipping 71 technique, shown in
The liquid masking material 67 may, in dipping 71 or spraying 65, already contain the lubricating filler medium 47 and/or the electrically conductive filler medium 48 and/or a photosensitive filler medium 77 dissolved in the polymer 45 of the liquid masking material 67. The photosensitive filler medium 77 may contain or consists of a photoresist or a hardening polymer. The photosensitive filler medium 77 is to be understood as a material which changes its physical and/or mechanical and/or chemical properties upon illumination with light of a certain wavelength range. As a possible, non-limiting example, a photosensitive filler medium 77 may increase its resistivity against a chemical, such as decreasing its solubility in this chemical.
A pretreated contact element 1a after a processing step shown in
Three possible techniques for removing parts of the masking layer 15 are shown in
As shown in
The pulsed laser 109a, as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The displacement treatment 93 described with reference to
A structured contact element 1b is shown in a pre-disposition state 97 in
In the pre-deposition state 97, shown in
In the next fabrication step, a contact material 53 is deposited in between the portions of the masking layer 23, on the unmasked regions 37, and the contact material 53 is not deposited on the portions of the masking layer 23 to form the final state 99 shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16172753 | Jun 2016 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation of PCT International Application No. PCT/EP 2017/063389, filed on Jun. 1, 2017, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to European Patent Application No. 16172753.2, filed on Jun. 2, 2016.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190097342 A1 | Mar 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2017/063389 | Jun 2017 | US |
Child | 16203791 | US |