Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6375489
-
Patent Number
6,375,489
-
Date Filed
Monday, January 10, 200025 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, April 23, 200223 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Bradley; P. Austin
- León; Edwin A.
Agents
- Devine, Millimet & Branch
- Remus; Paul C.
- Sullivan; Todd A.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 439 410
- 439 56
- 439 91
- 439 259
- 439 261
- 439 393
- 439 67
- 439 77
- 439 417
- 439 427
- 439 329
- 439 933
- 439 86
- 439 891
- 439 884
-
International Classifications
- H01R1120
- H01R424
- H01R426
- H01R1315
- H01R1362
-
Abstract
The invention is an electrical connector that provides a connection system that releasably connects the circuit paths of a flexible conductive circuit to a printed circuit board having a corresponding row of contacts, without the need for soldering, crimping or welding operations, or extensive preparation of the flexible circuit before connection. One embodiment has at least one spring contact formed in a cover; at least one rotatable cam; and a base with a circuit alignment window for initial alignment of a flexible conductive circuit introduced into the connector. The cover and base snap together to house the rotatable cam(s). The connection, when using at least one cam, is made by feeding the circuit into a slot in the cam, then rotating the cam to bring the circuit into contact with the spring contact which has a tapered insulation plane that pierces and peels back the dielectric covering of the conductive circuit to make a direct metal to metal, gas tight contact between the deflectable contact and the conductors of the conductive circuit. Wrapping the circuit around the cam during the connection process provides stability to the connection and takes strain off of the connection site, thereby providing a more stable and reliable connection. In the alternative, a connection module with an activation portion and a contact support portion may be used to house the deflectable spring contact. A deflection ridge is formed in the activation portion. The deflection ridge presses the circuit into the tapered insulation plane of the deflectable contact which is formed in the contact support portion, thereby allowing the tapered insulation plane to pierce the dielectric of the flexible circuit. In all embodiments, the displaced dielectric may be reused, by being heated until it reflows, to add stability to the newly formed connection.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates generally to multi-terminal or multi-contact electrical connectors to connect electrical contacts of various shapes. The invention relates more specifically to electrical connectors of the insulation piercing, gas tight electrical connection type to quickly and inexpensively interconnect a wide variety of contacts to conventional flexible circuit, tape cable or encapsulated round wire harness. Most specifically the invention relates to an electrical connector that terminates more than twice the number of contacts per inch than a conventional insulation displacing connector and eliminates the expense of soldering, crimping or welding usually associated with the attachment of a connector contact to an interconnect circuit.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Conventional electrical connectors are designed to connect the circuit paths of a flexible circuit to a spring contact system. Usually the surface of the flexible circuit needs to be prepared before connection. Preparation of a flexible circuit usually includes labor intensive activities such as stripping off the dielectric, cleaning the exposed conductor or wire and then soldering each individual conductor of the spring contact system to each conductor or wire of the flexible circuit. As part of the reason many connectors require intensive preparation of the flexible circuit, many conventional connectors do not provide a wiping action to clean the conductors of the flexible circuit. Some connectors also do not provide a gas tight seal when the electrical connection is made, allowing air to contact the conductors causing oxidation, and consequent degradation in the quality of the connection due to the oxidation on the conductors.
Many conventional multi-terminal connectors comprise male and female housings that fasten together to secure coupling of terminals mounted within the housings. Many connectors require a fair amount of force to completely engage the many terminals being connected. Zero insertion force type connectors aim at reducing or eliminating the force typically needed to make the connection. In reducing the force, some connector systems use camming devices or cam lock features. Cam lock features typically include one or more cam surfaces on an operator handle or lever that is mounted to the housing of one of the connector halves to be mated. The other connector housing has one or more protruding cam followers to engage the cam surface(s) so that as the lever or handle is moved in the desired direction, the cam surface(s) act on the cam follower(s), drawing the connector halves together and forcing secure engagement of the contacts.
Other zero insertion force type connectors conventionally have a housing mounting a plurality of terminals in a generally parallel array. An actuator, such as a pressure member, is used to press the flexible flat cable, flexible printed circuit board or the like against contact portions of the terminals. In order to keep the size of the connectors relatively small, and the insertion force required to connect the terminals to a minimum, some connectors have been designed with actuators or pressure members which are rotatably or pivotally mounted on the housing for movement between first, open positions allowing free insertion of the cables into the connector housings, and second, closed positions for clamping the flat cables against the contact portions of the terminals.
One of the problems with connectors having rotatable actuators, cams or pressure members is the tendency of moving the pressure member back toward its open position when undesired external forces are applied to the flexible flat cable. The flexible flat cable tends to raise and rotate the pressure member, thereby releasing the flexible flat cable from the connector, and possibly damaging the terminals in the process of the flexible flat cable being pulled out of or disconnected from the connector.
Thus there is a need for an inexpensive, easily assembled connector that eliminates the expensive, time consuming preparation steps common to use of most connectors, and that eliminates strain on the electrical connection or inadvertent disconnection, by securely locking the flexible flat cable, flexible printed circuit board, round wire interconnect or the like in place within the connect, while producing a gas tight seal.
SUMMARY
The basic embodiment of the invention is a connector that accurately aligns each contact to its assigned conductor. Individual contacts of at least one contact or at least one compound dynamic contact gradually engage the conductive circuit (flat flexible cable, flexible printed circuit board, round wire interconnect) and apply sufficient force to pierce, via a tapered insulation plane on each contact, through the circuit's dielectric but not its individual conductors. The contact(s) are deflected, in a first deflection range, by the circuit's conductor in such a way as to skive off (remove, peel off) all the insulating dielectric and a majority of the adhesive on one side of the conductive circuit without totally piercing the conductor.
In one embodiment, may be a rotatable cam or cylinder into which the circuit passes. A portion of the circuit is retained in the cam. The circuit may enter partially or pass all the way through the cam. As the cam or cylinder rotates through its rotation cycle, the conductive circuit is wrapped around it, and the cam or cylinder includes raised features designed to lift at least one conductor of a flexible circuit into an electrical connection with a deflectable contact and to then lift the deflectable contact into a second deflection range. The contact(s), as it is deflected into the second deflection range, moves the contact's insulation plane into a neutral (non-cutting) position and significantly increases the contact force on the circuit's conductor.
This sequence of mechanical events brings the optional force concentrators on the contact(s) into a high pressure connection with the conductive circuit's conductors. The contact is designed to apply sufficient pressure between each contact and its mating conductor to pierce through any remaining adhesive and make a metal to metal, or surface finish to surface finish gas-tight electrical connection. In another embodiment, there may be a contact module containing at least one compound dynamic contact, but with a contact activation portion instead of a cam. In either embodiment, a simple contact having an insulation plane pierces and peels back the top layer of dielectric from a flexible conductive circuit such that a partial seal is formed between each contact and the individual conductors of the flexible conductive circuit.
Therefore an aspect of invention is to provide an interconnect system to quickly and inexpensively interconnect a wide variety of shapes of contacts to conventional conductive circuits such as flexible circuit, tape cable, or encapsulated round wire harness.
Another aspect of the invention is to provide an interface within the connector's body wherein the connector is adaptable to an application specific contact shape exiting the connector body. Exiting contacts may be designed as a simple pin for insertion into a printed circuit board or a complex spring designed to mate with other connectors.
A further aspect of the invention is to provide a connector that eliminates the expense of removing the insulation and cleaning the conductors of the flexible circuit and soldering, crimping or welding that is usually associated with the attachment of a connector contact to an interconnect circuit.
Yet another aspect is to provide a sealing mechanism wherein the displaced dielectric and adhesive of the conductive circuit are compressed against the side walls of the connector housing providing a partial contact to conductor seal. The seal can be easily made permanent by heating each circuit conductor to a temperature that causes the dielectric to flow and thereby seal the contact to conductor interface.
A still further aspect is to provide a connector that only pierces through the upper layer of a conductive circuit's dielectric, leaving the base laminate layer intact. By eliminating the need to remove or penetrate the base layer of dielectric, the conductive circuit's dimensional stability is maintained and tearing or damaging the conductive circuit is avoided. Also any risk of changing the conductive circuit's electrical or dielectric parameters is avoided.
A further aspect of the invention is to provide a connector that can be mounted to the end of a flexible conductive circuit without first removing the dielectric from the terminating area, that can be mounted without the use of tooling, and that can be easily coupled to a mating connector with minimal hand movements and without having to observe the connection site.
Still another aspect is to provide a connector that is relatively easy and inexpensive to make in quantity.
Still another aspect is to provide a connector that configures the flexible circuit in a manner that strain relieves the circuit and in so doing protects the contact to conductor electrical interface.
Still another aspect is to provide a low pressure contact system that may be used in those applications requiring a gold to gold interface or a ZIF (zero insertion force) style connector. In this type of application the flexible circuits insulating overlay must be first removed from the circuit before it is inserted into the connector.
Other aspects of the invention will be exemplified by the following drawing figures, detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention, and the appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
a
is an exploded cross sectional end view of the connector embodiment using a cam.
FIG. 1
b
is an exploded front view of the connector of
FIG. 1
a.
FIG. 2
a
is a top view of a compound dynamic contact, showing, in this example, two individual contacts, spaced apart by dielectric, and laminated together.
FIG. 2
b
is a side plan view of a contact with compression notches and force concentrators showing the first deflection range.
FIG. 2
c
is a side plan view of a contact with compression notches and force concentrators, showing the second deflection range as the compression notches collapse.
FIG. 3
a
is a cross sectional view of the activation cam, and at least one contact, with a circuit inserted.
FIG. 3
b
is a front view of the activation cam showing the various circuit alignment systems used.
FIG. 3
c
is a back view of an activation cam, where a flexible circuit would exit the cam if the circuit were to pass through the cam.
FIG. 3
d
is an end view of an activation cam.
FIG. 3
e
is a sectional view taken along Line “A—A” of
FIG. 3
d
without a flexible circuit installed.
FIG. 3
f
is a sectional view taken along line “A—A” of
FIG. 3
d
with a flexible circuit installed.
FIG. 3
g
is a top view of a flexible circuit usable with the invention, and having precisely located holes placed through the dielectric separating the individual circuit conductors, to guide the circuit into the connector.
FIG. 4
is a cross sectional view of the activation cam after it has been rotated, showing how the contact(s) pierces and peels back the dielectric insulation from the conductive flexible circuit to make a direct contact between the contact(s) and the conductors of the conductive flexible circuit. This figure also shows an optional second contact.
FIG. 5
a
is a cut away side view of the activation module embodiment of the invention, with a flexible circuit contact inserted.
FIG. 5
b
is an end view of the activation portion of the embodiment that does not use a cam.
FIG. 5
c
is a side view of the activation portion of the embodiment that does not use a cam.
FIG. 5
d
is an end view of the contact support portion of the embodiment that does not use a cam.
FIG. 5
e
is a side view of the contact support portion of the embodiment that does not use a cam.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring now to the drawings, like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout. Most basically the invention comprises a spring contact which may have a tapered insulation plane that can pierce and peel back the top layer of dielectric of a flexible circuit and form a gas-tight, surface finish to surface finish seal.
One embodiment of the invention is connector
10
which has three basic parts, as shown in
FIG. 1
a
, a molded cover
12
which may have at least one molded-in, press fit, heat swaged, or otherwise attached deflectable spring contact
14
which may be a single contact or a compound dynamic contact, at least one free-floating, activation cam
16
rotatably disposed within the molded cover
12
, and a molded base
18
. The molded cover
12
and base
18
form a housing in which activation cam
16
is rotatably mounted, and the at least one deflectable spring contact
14
is connectable to at least one conductive circuit
20
such as a flexible printed circuit board, flat flexible cable or round wire interconnect.
A key to the invention is the deflectable contact
14
. Contact
14
is geometrically shaped and mechanically designed and positioned in relationship to a flexible conductive circuit
20
to, when force is applied, be stiff enough to press into contact with exposed conductors of the at least one conductive circuit. If a tapered insulation plane
22
is used, contact
14
should be stiff enough to pierce through the top layer of an insulating dielectric
20
a
, but compliant enough to be deflected along the conductive layer in such a manner as to cause contact
14
to travel over the surface of the conductive circuit and scrape off the top layer of insulating dielectric
20
a
and 0.0001″ to 0.001″ of the conductive layer's surface to make a reliable electric connection that is at least partially sealed. The piercing and scraping process sufficiently deflects spring contact
14
to generate the control force necessary to make and maintain a reliable electrical interconnection between contact
14
and the conductive material of conductive circuit
20
. As shown in
FIG. 1
b
, base
18
also may include a circuit alignment window
30
to provide rough initial alignment of conductive circuit
20
with cam
16
when circuit
20
enters connector
10
.
The connector is designed for ease of assembly. It can be snapped together, for example using snap mechanisms
44
as shown in
FIG. 1
a
, and therefore eliminates expensive, time consuming ultrasonic or heat fusing assembly equipment typically needed to form conventional electrical connectors. In addition the connector
10
can therefore be easily disassembled and repaired or parts replaced as necessary. Connector
10
may contain one, or two or more, single or compound dynamic contacts
14
and activation cams
16
as required to terminate two or more conductive circuits
20
. Cam(s)
16
may be formed in varying round and oval shapes in order to accommodate conductive circuits of different thicknesses, yet all varieties of cam
16
fit in one size cover
12
and base
18
. For example, cam
16
may be oval, or may be round, or cylindrical, with raised features to lift at least one conductor of a flexible, conductive circuit into electrical connection with a deflectable contact, and as the cam continues to rotate, lift the contact from a first to a second deflection range.
As shown, for example, in
FIGS. 1
a
,
1
b
, and
2
a
, molded cover
12
contains at least one spring contact
14
. As shown in
FIG. 2
a
, spring contact
14
may be multiple individual contacts laminated together to form a compound contact. A compound contact
14
may also be formed of layers of contacts that may be stacked vertically or horizontally and shaped to accommodate contact deflection and applied pressure requirements of any particular chosen application. Cover
12
adds structural support to the connector
10
and maintains orientation of the spring contact(s)
14
being connected during the assembly process. Contact pitch, alignment, configuration and stored energy (contact mass and deflection range) are design dependent features and may be easily adjusted to accommodate special requirements. Special requirements may include, but are not limited to, modifying contact pitch center or power requirements within a particular connector, or accommodating special dielectric requirements such as thicker or thinner dielectrics. The configuration of contact(s)
14
, including the length, thickness, and structural make up, in combination with the mechanical advantages of the connector
10
, and cam
16
, allow connector
10
to be easily adaptable for use with various conductive circuits
20
.
Whether single or compound, contact
14
is a flat design that allows it to reliably connect to closely packed conductors. To maintain the desired stored energy in contact
14
, a compound contact is formed from a composite laminated contact design, as shown in
FIG. 2
a
. Compound dynamic contact
14
is two or more individual contacts that are laminated together to create a mechanically sound contact structure. For example, 0.005″ thick contacts are separated by a thin film dielectric, about 0.001″ thick, placing the contacts on 0.006″ pitch centers. By laminating two or more individual contacts together with a structurally enhanced dielectric that has, for example, been created with its molecular, granular or fiber particles oriented to accommodate movement in one direction over another, contact mass and deflection range, and electrical characteristics can be significantly improved while using contacts that are 50% or more thinner than those required to achieve the same results using individual contacts. Components layers of a compound contact may be stacked either vertically or horizontally to accommodate the dynamics and pressure requirements of a particular application. The invention thus can terminate to tightly packed conductors. The use of a structurally enhanced dielectric increases a compound contact's strength through the laminating process.
FIG. 2
a
illustrates a compound dynamic contact
14
capable of terminating to conductors on 0.006 inch pitch centers.
The material, thickness and width of contact(s)
14
is selected based on the particular application's required contact deflection range and interconnect force. Contact(s)
14
may be formed from a spring wire or may be etched or stamped from a spring material. Contact
14
, formed in the manner of the invention, stores and applies the necessary contact pressure on demand. Contact
14
provides a wiping contact, as it is connected to a conductor. The deflection capability of contact
14
compensates for variations in the thickness of conductive circuits
20
being connected with connector
10
. In composite contact
14
, the dielectric laminating the individual contacts together provides required insulating material and stabilizes individual contacts, thus insuring that the individual contacts maintain their spaced relationship, and any mechanical requirements.
The single or compound deflectable contact
14
may have, at the end that connects to an electrically conductive circuit
20
, a tapered, pointed insulation plane
22
, as shown in
FIG. 1
a
,
2
b
,
2
c
,
3
a
, and
4
. During connection, the rotating cam
16
lifts the circuit
20
forcing it to engage the pointed insulation plane
22
which then pierces and peels off the top dielectric and adhesive from the conductive circuit
20
, thereby exposing the circuit's conductor, while leaving the base or bottom layer of dielectric intact. Thus, unlike conventional insulation-displacing connectors and contacts which penetrate and weaken the circuit's base dielectric, the invention provides a contact and process that maintains the structural integrity of a circuit's base dielectric laminate by electrically terminating to the surface of each conductor.
Also, optionally, at the connection end of contact
14
may be a plurality of force concentrators
24
that accentuate pressure at the interface between spring contact
14
and circuit conductor
20
as required to penetrate any remaining adhesive not peeled back by insulation plane
22
and also to scrape off about 0.0001″ to 0.001″ of the conductive material of conductor
20
to clean off any metal oxides, such as tin or copper oxide, that may have formed on the conductive material, to create a metal to metal, gas tight electrical connection between spring contact
14
and conductive circuit
20
.
Compared to conventional high density contacts and connectors, compound dynamic contacts
14
have two or more deflection ranges A and B through which they flex during connection, as best shown in
FIGS. 2
b
and
2
c
. The force each contact
14
applies as it passes through the deflection ranges may be controlled by optional contact compression notches
26
, also shown in
FIGS. 2
b
and
2
c
.
FIG. 1
a
shows a contact
14
with no force concentrators or compression notches. The first deflection range A provides force strong enough to pierce and peel off the dielectric of conductive circuit
20
, but not to pierce the metal (for example, copper) conductors. The force supplied in the first deflection range A is determined by the minimum thickness of the contact, as shown in
FIG. 2
b
. If compression notches
26
are used, as the compression notches close, they activate the stored energy of the entire contact
14
. By way of general example, if the contact's body is twice as thick as the thinnest portion of the compression notch, then closing the notch will approximately double the contact's applied force. The typical force required to pierce and peel the dielectric off its conductor may be as little as 75 grams while Applicant's invention can generate and maintain approximately
150
grams of contact force to achieve a gas tight connection. At least a partially sealed contact
14
to conductor
20
interface occurs as the peeled off, displaced dielectric of conductive circuit
20
compresses around the mating conductors. The partial seal is formed of adhesive and dielectric (for example, polyester). The seal is caused in part by the compliant nature of the dielectric and adhesive of conductive circuit
20
, in part by the memory induced into the dielectric of flexible circuit
20
during the laminating process, and in part by the ‘desire’ of the dielectric and adhesive of conductive circuit
20
to reoccupy the space from where it was peeled, where contact
14
is now present. The seal can easily be made permanent by heating each individual contact of contact(s)
14
to a temperature that causes the dielectric to re-flow (melt) and thereby seal the contact to circuit interface. Thus, the dielectric, instead of being scraped off and discarded, can essentially be reused in situ to reform around the newly made electrical connection.
As described above maybe at least one compound dynamic contact
14
molded into cover
12
. However a second compound dynamic contact
42
may be molded in to base
18
such that a compound dynamic contact is positioned on either side of cam
16
, about 180 degrees apart, as shown in
FIG. 4
, to increase the density of contacts that may be connected within connector
10
. Shown in
FIG. 4
is an optional force concentration extender
40
which may be molded into contact
14
and/or
42
, or cover
12
or base
18
to provide additional compression force to aid contact
14
in piercing and peeling the dielectric of circuit
20
.
As shown in
FIG. 1
a
, activation cam
16
is housed within molded cover
12
and base
18
. When disposed in cover
12
and base
18
, cam
16
accurately aligns with compound dynamic contact
14
and, during connection, aligns the individual conductors of conductive circuit
20
to the individual contacts of contact(s)
14
. Cam
16
is rotated to make the electrical connection. Cam
16
is rotatable by inserting an activation tool (not shown) into cam activation socket
32
, shown in
FIGS. 1
a
and
3
d
. As a security feature, cam activation socket may have a customized shape, requiring a customized tool for operation such that only a user with the appropriately shaped tool could activate the cam.
In one embodiment of the invention, to form the electrical connection, conductive circuit
20
is inserted into connector
10
and roughly aligned by circuit alignment window
30
in base
18
. Circuit
20
then passes into cam
16
via circuit receptacle slot or notch
38
as shown in
FIGS. 1
a
and
3
d
. In this particular illustration, notch
38
extends through cam
16
. However, notch
38
need only be able to capture and hold circuit
20
inside cam
16
. Thus, depending on the application, it is not necessary that a slot extend all the way through cam
16
. There may be simply a slot or notch formed partially through cam
16
, into which circuit
20
is inserted, wherein circuit
20
is not able to pass completely through cam
16
but rather is retained in the notch or slot. Circuit
20
is fed into cam
16
. Cam
16
is then rotated, which wraps circuit
20
around cam
16
and forces spring contact
14
to contact exposed conductors of circuit
20
, or if using a contact
14
with tapered insulation plane
22
, to pierce the dielectric
20
a
of circuit
20
and skive off both the dielectric and adhesive
20
a
of circuit
20
sufficient to expose the conductor, for example copper, contained therein. The force exerted by contact
14
is strong enough to peel off the top layer of dielectric and adhesive
20
a
, but does not pierce the conductor. It merely shaves the surface of the conductor. Because of the oval or raised shape of cam
16
, contact
14
and circuit
20
are compressed into a gas tight connection. The insertion of circuit
20
into cam
16
, the wrapping action of cam
16
on circuit
20
and the peeling of the dielectric
20
a
and adhesive of circuit
20
by spring contact
14
is shown in
FIGS. 3
a
and
4
. As noted contact
14
may or may not have the tapered, piercing insulation plane
22
. An instance where insulation plane
22
would not be used would be if the connection to be made were a gold/gold connection. In such a connection one would not want to pierce and possibly damage the soft gold, and would use a blunt ended low pressure, or zero-insertion force contact. In this type of application the flexible circuit's insulating overlay must be removed from the circuit before it is inserted into the connector.
In addition, base
18
aids in providing structural support, component orientation, and initial alignment of circuit
20
. Base
18
orients all components, cam
16
and cover
12
into their proper location, and easily snaps to cover
12
, requiring no tools or special skills. As shown in
FIG. 1
a
, base
18
also includes a cam orientation indicator or on-off lock
28
that locks cam
16
open (rotatable) or closed (non-rotatable) as required. As discussed above, circuit alignment window
30
of base
18
, shown in
FIG. 1
b
, provides initial alignment of circuit
20
to circuit receptacle notch
38
of cam
16
. Base
18
is relatively easy to manufacture in quantity and its exterior configuration can be easily modified to mate with other commercially available connectors, or designed to interlock with other connectors
10
of the invention to form a modular connector block (not shown). Thus connector blocks having two or more rows of external pins are possible.
In addition connector
10
may have other features which enhance alignment and connection. Alignment ribs
34
disposed on cam
16
aid in aligning the free floating cam
16
to spring contact
14
, and also function to straighten, separate and align individual contact pins of contact
14
in the event they may have become bent or out of alignment or proper spacing. The space between alignment ribs
34
precisely matches the thickness of the contact(s)
14
thus removing any alignment tolerance and making fine line attachment possible. Molded-in, tapered registration or alignment pins or posts
36
on cam
16
work in combination with the rotating, locking motion of cam
16
to grab circuit
20
, through accurately installed alignment holes
48
, shown in
FIG. 3
g
, designed to receive the alignment pins
36
, and in so doing, accurately align the conductors of circuit
20
to the molded-in deflectable contact
14
as cam
16
is rotated. Alignment holes
48
would need to be created in circuit
20
by a user or manufacturer.
Also included on cam
16
may be conductor alignment grooves, notches or troughs
46
which start approximately 0.050″ inside the circuit receptacle notch
38
and taper from the surface to a depth equal to or greater than the laminating trough found between each conductor of a flexible circuit
20
. The alignment grooves/notches
46
reach their maximum depth at the point the circuit
20
exits cam
16
in an embodiment in which circuit
20
passes through cam
16
. The alignment notches
46
continue around the outer surface of the cam
16
for a distance not greater than ⅛ of the cam's overall circumference. The depth of the alignment notches
46
decreases from the circuit exit point until it blends with the cam's outer surface. The side walls of each alignment notch
46
are angled in such a manner as to center each conductor
20
. The alignment notches
46
are built into activation cam
16
, as shown in
FIGS. 3
b
,
3
c
and
3
e
. The alignment notches
46
are designed to take advantage of the laminating troughs between each conductor of circuit
20
. The laminating troughs are created during the laminating process that forms circuit
20
as the dielectric is compressed around each conductor. The troughs in the dielectric of circuit
20
work in conjunction with cam
16
's molded-in registration pins
36
, and alignment holes
48
of circuit
20
, to guide the conductors into proper alignment. The alignment system of the invention is a redundant system to ensure proper alignment of conductors of circuit
20
and contacts
14
. In addition to providing an additional alignment feature, alignment notches
46
also prevent circuit discontinuity, damage or disengagement under vibration. Thus, use of activation cam(s)
16
and deflectable contact(s)
14
can accurately align conductors of a fine line (conductors on 0.006 inch pitch centers) flexible circuit to their assigned contacts. Use of cam(s)
16
and its alignment ribs
34
, registration pins
36
, and alignment grooves/notches
46
significantly reduces the stack up (or compounding) of assembly tolerances.
During connection, as shown in
FIG. 4
, progressive circuit insertion may be attained by angling the apex of cam
16
in a manner that allows an individual contact of compound dynamic contact
14
to mate with an individual conductor of circuit
20
, one contact at a time. This technique significantly reduces circuit insertion force, because one conductor at a time is mated, as opposed to mating
40
or more at a time, even though
40
or more conductors may be mated using connector
10
. Additionally, as mentioned above, strain is eliminated on the individual contacts and conductors by wrapping circuit
20
around cam
16
during the connection sequence. Wrapping circuit
20
around cam
16
creates a friction/compression lock on circuit
20
which equalizes stress across the whole circuit
20
, thereby protecting circuit
20
from stress and strain within connector
10
. Thus, rotating cam
16
structurally supports circuit
20
and forces each contact
14
, whether single or compound, to pierce the dielectric of circuit
20
(if applicable and not forming a gold to gold connection) and make contact with each conductor of circuit
20
. In addition the shape of cam
16
may be varied to accommodate circuits
20
of various thickness, yet will still fit in a cover
12
and base
18
of one, uniform size. In summary, cam(s)
16
can accurately align itself to a row of deflectable contacts and, once aligned, orient individual conductors of a flexible conductive circuit to mate with their assigned contacts. Rotating the cam(s) forces the flexible circuit to engage the deflectable contact(s) and complete the electrical inter-connection.
Most conductive circuits
20
are formed with a bottom or base layer of dielectric with adhesive to attach the dielectric to the conductor, the conductor, and then a top layer of adhesive and a top layer of dielectric. A great deal of force is not required to be provided by connector
10
and contacts
14
because only one (the top) layer of dielectric is pierced and peeled by the invention.
To activate and attach the spring contact(s), in one embodiment as described above, a rotating cam
16
may be used, however, in another embodiment, the connector containing the spring contact(s) may be a contact module
100
, as shown in
FIGS. 5
a
-
5
e
, instead of a cam with a cover and base. Contact activation module
100
aligns spring contact
102
with a circuit
104
using built-in contact deflection activation ridge
106
(similar in function to alignment ribs
34
on cam
16
), a circuit alignment notch
108
, and tapered alignment pins
110
to properly align circuit
104
. A spring contact
102
is shown with a tapered insulation plane
102
a
. Spring contact
102
is deflected as circuit
104
passes over activation ridge
106
, and then pierces and peels back the top layer of dielectric
104
a
and adhesive of circuit
104
, as circuit
104
passes through contact module
100
.
Contact(s)
102
, as with contact
14
, may be a single or compound spring contact with a tapered insulation plane
102
a
. Contact(s)
14
and
102
are the elements that actually form the connection—whether by piercing and peeling back the flexible circuit's dielectric or simply making contact with the conductors of the flexible circuit. Contact(s)
102
may also have at least one optional force concentrator
112
that interacts with deflection ridge
106
to ensure good contact between contact(s)
102
and the conductors of circuit
104
.
Contact module
100
is comprised in part of a contact support portion
114
which houses contact(s)
102
, optional for fine alignment of circuit
104
, tapered alignment pins
110
, at least one module alignment slot
124
, and at least one locking hole
122
. There is also a contact activation portion
116
which comprises registration pins
118
, which roughly align circuit
104
, activation deflection ridge
106
, at least one circuit alignment notch
108
, and flexible locking arms
120
. Arms
120
snap into the at least one latching hole
122
in contact support portion
114
to secure contact support portion
114
and contact activation portion
116
together to form contact module
100
.
The assembly sequence for contact module
100
is as follows. Flexible circuit
104
is roughly aligned to registration pins
118
of activation portion
116
and aligned in circuit alignment notch(es)
108
. Activation portion
116
is then aligned and inserted into contact support portion
114
using alignment module slot(s)
124
. Tapered registration pins
110
of support portion
114
further align circuit
104
as activation portion
116
is inserted into support portion
114
. The insertion of activation portion
116
forces, in this particular example, the insulation plane
102
a
of contact(s)
102
to pierce the dielectric of circuit
104
and peel off the dielectric
104
a
, thereby exposing the conductor. Contact(s)
102
is then forced into compression as deflection ridge
106
aligns to force concentrators
112
which forces contact(s)
102
to compress against the exposed conductors of circuit
104
, creating a gas-tight, surface finish to surface finish connection. Activation portion
116
and contact support portion
114
are secured together using arms
120
of activation module
116
and latching holes
122
of support portion
114
.
In all embodiments, strain is reduced because the force required in the present invention is required only to pierce one layer of the dielectric and peel it back, not to pierce the conductor itself, nor peel off all of the dielectric.
The multi-task connection function performed in essentially one fluid step has many technical (as discussed above) and cost advantages. Conventional ‘high density’ (contacts on pitch centers less than 0.040 inches) connectors require the removal of the covering dielectric and a soldering or welding operation to attach the connector contacts to the circuit's conductor(s). The attachment process becomes more difficult as the circuit's density (number of conductors per circuit) increases. Typical problems increasing the cost of high density connector attachment include; solder bridging, contact misregistration (alignment), conductor delamination and cold solder joints. The invention eliminates all of the previously mentioned problems by, in one process, piercing through the dielectric of the flexible circuit and making a surface finish to surface finish or metal to metal, gas tight connection using the tapered insulation plane and optional force concentrators of the contact(s)
14
or
102
. However, the same spring connection mechanism may be used with a blunt ended contact
14
or
102
, to form delicate, for example gold to gold, connections.
The invention coordinates the alignment of a high density, fine line, flexible circuit to a mating compound dynamic contact. Thus the connector provides an essentially fluid process for terminating a conductive circuit, and can terminate up to 80 lines per inch. The process is essentially a two step process, when using an embodiment with a cam. First, free floating activation cam
16
is precisely located to spring contact(s)
14
in the housing comprising cover
12
and base
18
, using tapered alignment ribs
34
on cam
16
. Next, tapered registration pins
36
of cam
16
work in combination with tapered conductor alignment notches
46
built into cam
16
and with the rotation of cam
16
to grab circuit
20
and accurately align the conductors of circuit
20
to the spring contact
14
of cover
12
. Tapered alignment notches
46
of cam
16
also lock circuit
20
in place to provide stability to circuit
20
and the connection being made.
In the alternative, the connection sequence for the embodiment using an contact module with activation and support portions was discussed above, and it can be seen that, with either embodiment, the compliant, flexible, deflectable spring contact(s) compensate for variations in the thickness of the flexible circuit and provide a predictable and reliable contact force. The simple, mechanical components of the invention insure long term reliability. Each spring contact may be positioned to penetrate more than one insulating layer, in order to electronically mate with a flexible circuit having two or more conductive layers. When using a cam, the apex of the cam, and the alignment ribs, may be angled in a manner that allows a single contact of the spring contact to mate with a single circuit conductor of the flexible circuit, one connection at a time. This one by one connection significantly reduces contact insertion force required. Similarly the deflection ridge of the activation portion of the contact module may be angled to provide one by one connection.
The contact(s) and cam(s) may be individually sized to accommodate specific electrical needs, and the connector may be formed to accommodate more than one spring contact and more than one cam. The connector housing the spring contact(s) may be made connectable to form blocks of connectors, depending on the desired task or application. Such possible applications include; the use of a PTH (plated through hole) flexible circuit to change signal direction within the connector or build in test points, active and passive components may be attached to the circuit, or the flexible circuit may be built with an integral network of fuses designed to protect the modules it joins.
In all embodiments, the invention provides a housing for optional tapered or blunt spring contacts, and deflects the spring contact(s), if tapered, to activate its stored energy to pierce and peel back the dielectric of a flexible circuit to make and maintain a reliable electrical interconnection between the spring contact and the conductors of the flexible circuit. The invention provides one fluid process with no scraping or other preparation of the flexible circuit required before introduction of the flexible circuit to the spring contact(s).
The foregoing provides non-limiting description of the invention, for purposes of illustration, and it is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many variations and modifications of the embodiments described herein will be obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art in light of the above disclosure. The scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
Claims
- 1. An electrical connector comprising:at least one deflectable contact formed in a portion of said connector; means formed in said connector for aligning at least one conductive circuit with said contact; at least one activation means in said connector to activate said at least one contact to engage conductors of at least one conductive circuit, to form a reliable electrical connection between individual conductors of said at least one conductive circuit and individual contact of said at least one deflectable contact; and wherein said at least one contact is tapered to a pointed insulation plane which pierces and peels the upper layer of dielectric insulation and adhesive of said at least one conductive circuit and scrapes off a thin layer of conductive material from said at least one conductive circuit such that the conductive portion of said at least one deflectable contact interfaces to form a gas tight partial seal with the now exposed conductors of said at least on conductive circuit.
- 2. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said dielectric is reusable to form a permanent seal when the at least one deflectable contact is heated to a temperature that causes said dielectric to reflow and seal the contact to conductive circuit interface.
- 3. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said at least one contact further comprises a plurality of force concentrators to accentuate pressure at the interface between said at least one contact and said at least one conductive circuit during connection.
- 4. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said at least one contact comprises a plurality of compression notches formed thereon, thereby creating at least two deflection ranges of flexibility of said at least one contact, wherein a first deflection rage is determined by the minimum thickness of said at least one contact and wherein second deflection range is established by said plurality of compression notches being closed.
- 5. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said at least one contact comprises at least one contact compression extender to add force to said at least one contact to aid in forming an electrical connection between said at least one contact and said at least one conductive circuit.
- 6. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said connector comprises a connection module comprising an activation portion comprising;at least one alignment notch and a plurality of registration pins for aligning entry of at least one conductive circuit; at least one contact deflection ridge formed into an activation portion of said module at a location inside said activation portion where at least one deflectable contact meets said at least one conductive circuit, to provide deflection of said at least one deflectable contact, and force to enable a tapered insulation plane of said deflectable contact to pierce and peel back a top layer of insulation and adhesive from said at least one conductive circuit to create said electrical connection between said at least one deflectable contact and said at least one conductive circuit; a support portion containing said at least one deflectable contact, a plurality of tapered registration on pins to aid in aligning said at least one deflectable contact and said at least one conductive circuit; and means for attaching said contact support portion to said activation portion, including an alignment slot for aligning said activation portion and said support portion as they are joined.
- 7. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said at least one deflectable contact is a compound spring contact comprising at least two circuit contacts laminated together.
- 8. An electrical connector according to claim 7 wherein said at least one compound spring contact comprises multiple layers of contacts which are stackable vertically or horizontally to accommodate contact deflection and applied pressure requirements of any chosen application.
- 9. An electrical connector according to claim 1 wherein said connector further comprises a molded cover wherein said at least one contact is formed.
- 10. An electrical connector according to claim 9 wherein said activation means comprises at least one activation cam, received in said cover, and rotatably disposed within said cover, and a base which attaches to said cover to enclose said cam.
- 11. An electrical connector according to claim 10 comprising two contacts, one on either side of said activation cam, spaced about 180 degrees apart.
- 12. An electrical connector according to claim 10 wherein said shape of said at least one activation cam is variable to accommodate various sizes and thicknesses of said at least one conductive circuit, yet fits one size of cover and base.
- 13. An electrical connector according to claim 10 wherein said at least one activation cam comprises a plurality of alignment ribs to align said at least one activation cam to said at least one deflectable contact, wherein the space between each said alignment rib corresponds to the thickness of each said at least one deflectable contact.
- 14. An electrical connector according to claim 10 wherein said cam comprises a cam activation socket which receives a tool used to rotate said cam.
- 15. An electrical connector according to claim 14 wherein said cam activation socket is custom formed to match a custom formed tool to provide a security feature wherein only said custom formed tool fits said custom formed activation socket.
- 16. An electrical connector comprising:at least one deflectable contact formed in a portion of said connector; means formed in said connector for aligning at least one conductive circuit with said contact; at least one activation means in said connector to activate said at least one contact to engage conductors of at least one conductive circuit, to form a reliable electrical connection between individual conductors of said at least one conductive circuit and individual contact of said at least one deflectable contact; a molded cover wherein said at least one contact is formed; said activation means comprising: at least one activation cam, received in said cover, and rotatably disposed within said cover, and a base attachable to said cover to enclose said cam, said base comprising at least one cam orientation indicator to lock said at least one activation cam into rotatable and non-rotatable positions.
- 17. An electrical connector according to claim 10 wherein said base comprises means for attaching said base to said cover to enclose said at least one activation cam.
- 18. An electrical connector comprising:at least one deflectable contact formed in a portion of said connector; means formed in said connector for aligning at least one conductive circuit with said contact; at least one activation means in said connector to activate said at least one contact to engage conductors of at least one conductive circuit, to form a reliable electrical connection between individual conductors of said at least one conductive circuit and individual contact of said at least one deflectable contact; a molded cover wherein said at least one contact is formed; said activation means comprises at least one activation cam, received in said cover, and rotatably disposed within said cover, and a base which attaches to said cover to enclose said cam; and said base comprises a circuit alignment window disposed in a wall of said base wherein said circuit alignment window aligns said at least one conductive circuit to a plurality of tapered registration pins disposed on said at least one activation cam, wherein said registration pins work in combination with rotation of said at least one activation cam to grab said at least one conductive circuit to accurately align conductors of said at least one conductive circuit to said at least one deflectable contact.
- 19. An electrical connector according to claim 18 wherein said tapered registration pins of said at least one activation cam work in combination with a plurality of conductor alignment grooves formed into said at least one activation cam to align said at least one conductive circuit on said at least one activation cam and prevent circuit discontinuity under vibration.
- 20. An electrical connector according to claim 19 wherein said at least one activation cam comprises a circuit receptacle slot into which said conductive circuit enters after said at least one conductive circuit enters said connector.
- 21. An electrical connector according to claim 19 wherein said plurality of conductor alignment groves start about 0.050 inches inside said circuit receptacle slot and taper from the surface of said at least one cam to a depth of about 0.010 inches wherein the depth decreases until blended with the outer surface of said at least one cam, and wherein said plurality of alignment grooves extends for about one eighth of the circumference of said at least one cam, and wherein in said depth decreases from a point where said circuit exits said cam until it blends with the outer surface of said cam.
- 22. An electrical connector comprising:at least one deflectable contact formed in a portion of said connector; means formed it said connector for aligning at least one conductive circuit with said contact; at least one activation means in said connector to activate said at least one contact to engage conductors of at least one conductive circuit, to form a reliable electrical connection between individual conductors of said at least one conductive circuit and individual contact of said at least one deflectable contact; and an activation portion comprising: at least one alignment notch and a plurality of registration pins for aligning entry of at least one conductive circuit; at least one contact deflection ridge formed into an activation portion of said module at a location inside said activation portion where at least one deflectable contact meets said at least one conductive circuit, to provide deflection of said at least one deflectable contact, and force to enable said at least one deflectable contact to form said electrical connection between said at least one deflectable contact and said at least one conductive circuit; a support portion containing said at least one deflectable contact, a plurality of tapered registration pins to aid in aligning said at least one deflectable contact and said at least one conductive circuit; and means for attaching said contact support portion to said activation portion, including an alignment slot for aligning said activation portion and said support portion as they are joined.
- 23. A deflectable electrical contact wherein said contract is tapered to a pointed insulation plane which is able to pierce and peel an upper layer of the dielectric insulation and adhesive of said at least one conductive circuit and to scrape off a thin layer of conductive material from said at least one conductive circuit when said deflectable contact is housed in an electrical connector and deflected by interaction of said circuit with said connector thereby forcing said tapered insulation plane to pierce and peel said dielectric to expose individual conductors of said circuit for gas tight connection with said deflectable contact.
- 24. The deflectable contact of claim 23 wherein said at least one contact comprises a plurality of force concentrators to accentuate pressure at the interface between said at least one contact and said at least one conductive circuit during connection in an electrical connector body.
- 25. The deflectable contact of claim 23 wherein said at least one contact comprises a plurality of compression notches formed thereon, thereby creating at least two deflection ranges of flexibility of said at least one contact, wherein a first deflection range is determined by the minimum thickness of said at least one contact and wherein a second deflection range is established by said plurality of compression notches.
- 26. The electrical contact of claim 23 wherein said deflectable contact comprises at least two contact laminated together to form a compound deflectable contact.
US Referenced Citations (13)