The present disclosure relates to an electrical connector, and more particularly to an electrical connector having the USB Type C mechanical configuration mechanically with some variation of the Display Port electrical characters.
USB Type C connectors have been more and more popularly used in the communication field since August 2014 when it was first publicly announced. The traditional USB Type C receptacle connector essentially includes a mating tongue with two rows of contacts exposed on two opposite mating surfaces of the mating tongue and a metallic shielding plate embedded within the mating tongue between the two rows of contacts. The two rows of contacts are totally twenty-four contacts with the pin assignment as shown in
An improved electrical connector is desired.
Accordingly, an object of the present disclosure is to provide a USB Type C receptacle connector with a metallic shielding plate in the mating tongue wherein the shielding plate is equipped with specifically arranged holes therein for meet not only the mechanical requirement during manufacturing but also the electrical requirement during using in a high frequency transmission.
To achieve the above object, an electrical connector includes an insulative housing with a rear base and a mating tongue extending forwardly from the base in a front-to-back direction. Two rows of contacts are retained in the housing. A metallic shielding plate is embedded within the housing and between the two rows of contacts. Each row of contacts defines positions from one to twelve in the transverse direction wherein positions 2&3 and 10&11 are designated for high frequency signal transmission. In the shielding plate the space between corresponding positions 4 and 6, and that between corresponding positions 7 and 9, are of a complete or enlarged hole being essentially fully empty along the front-to-back direction for achieving the high frequency transmission without undesired crosstalk among the corresponding contacts. Other portions of the shielding plate are equipped with holes designed for mechanical consideration during forming the housing via an insert-molding process with the shielding plate.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the disclosure will become more apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiments of the present disclosure. The reference numerals are only referred to the respective different embodiments. The first embodiment is shown in
An electrical connector 100 includes a contact module 110 received within a metallic shield 102 to commonly form a mating cavity 101 for receiving a complementary plug (not shown). In this embodiment, the contact module 110 is made via two-stage insert-molding process. Anyhow, other manufacturing methods are available understandably. In this embodiment, the contact module 110 includes a plurality of lower contacts 120 in one row and a metallic shielding plate 130 initially integrally formed within an inner insulator 112 to commonly form a contact subassembly 114 via a first stage insert-molding process, and further successively cooperating with a plurality of upper contacts 122 in another row to be integrally formed within an outer insulator 116 to form the complete contact module 110 via a second stage insert-molding process. The inner insulator 112 and the outer insulator 116 commonly form an insulative housing 111 including a rear base 119 and a mating tongue 117 extending forwardly from the base 119 along the front-to-back direction. Notably, the mating tongue 117 includes a thickened/stepped portion 115 around the root joined with the base portion 119 according to the USB Type C specification.
The lower contacts 120 and the upper contacts 122 are reversely symmetrically arranged with each other electrically as shown in the pin assignment table in
Each of the lower contacts 120 and the upper contacts 122 includes a front mating section 123 exposed upon the corresponding mating surface 113 of the mating tongue 117, a rear mounting section 125 extending outside of the base 119, and a retaining section 127 therebetween in the front-to-back direction. Each contact includes a horizontal portion 1221 and a vertical portion 1222 bending from the horizontal portion 1221, the mounting section 125 bends from the vertical portion 1222, the vertical portion and the mounting section forms a leg. The mating section 123 and the retaining section 127 forms the horizontal portion 1221.
Three (front/middle/rear) rows of ribs 107 are formed on the inner insulator 112 to separate the corresponding upper contacts 122, and one row of protrusions 105 to support the front end of the upper contacts 122 during the second stage insert-molding process. The inner insulator 112 further includes a plurality of holes 103 for receiving the corresponding core pins (not shown) to support the front end of the lower contacts 120 during the first stage insert-molding process. The two-stage insert-molding of the contact module is essentially disclosed in the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 9,923,286. Notably, the grounding contacts mechanically and electrically connect to the shielding plate 130 in the vertical direction while the power contacts at positions 4 and 9 mechanically and electrically connect with each other in the vertical direction.
The shielding plate 130 includes a horizontal main body 132, a rear wall 134 and a pair of mounting legs 136 by two sides of the rear wall 134 wherein the rear wall 134 and the pair of mounting legs 136 commonly extend from the rear edge of the main body 132. The main body 132 can be categorized with different zones, along the front-to-back direction, with corresponding holes/notches performing the respective effects. Holes 150A in zone A allows the power contacts contact each other in the vertical direction. Holes 150B in zone B allow the two opposite big outermost protrusions 105 on the upper side extend therethrough so as to be unitarily linked with the other two opposite being outermost protrusions 105 on the lower side. Holes 150C in zone C allows the corresponding core pins to support the front end of the lower contacts 120 during the first stage insert-molding process. The hole 150D is used for adjusting electrical characteristic. Holes 150E in zone E are used to form the front row of ribs 107. Holes 150F in zone F are used to break the bridges linked between the contact carrier between every adjacent two lower contacts 120. Holes 150G in zone G are used to form the middle row of ribs 107. Holes 150H in zone H are used to form the rear row of ribs 107. Notably, in this embodiment, in different zones the holes between positions 4 and 6 as well as those between positions 7 and 9 are further unified together as one elongated large hole 200 along the front-to-back direction. Specifically, the elongated large hole 200 starts from zone C and ends at a rear edge of the main body 132 of the shielding plate 130. Generally, zones E and F corresponds to the stepped portion 115. Zones G and H corresponds to the rear base 119, and zones A, B, C and D corresponds to the mating tongue 117.
Notably, the main body 132 forms an elongated extension 202 between the two elongated large holes 200 and is essentially located at the centerline of the shielding plate 130 along the front-to-back direction. The elongated extension 202 forms holes in zones D, E, F and G wherein the holes in Zones D, E and F are aligned with the centerline while the hole 150G in zone G is offset from the centerline, and a cutout 210 is formed in a lateral edge of the extension correspondingly. Understandably, such an offset hole and the corresponding cut are formed for electrical performance consideration rather than the mechanical manufacturing consideration.
Understandably, compared with what is shown in the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 9,923,986 and what is shown in
Notably, some holes are either fully or initially partially filled by the inner insulator 112 during the first stage insert-molding process, and the partially filled holes are successively along with the remaining holes further filled by the outer insulator 116.
As mentioned earlier, the undesired crosstalk is essentially derived from the high speed differential pairs of the lower contacts 120 at positions 2/3 and 10/11, and those of the upper contacts 122 at the positions 2/3 and 10/11, and further the differential pair of the lower contacts 120 at positions 6/7 and those of the upper contacts 122 at positions 6/7 which are originally of the low speed differential pairs but now transformed/converted to be the high speed differential pair. Notably, the positions are numbered for the upper contacts 122 are reversed with regard to those for the lower contacts 120. The elongated hole 200 is to eliminate resonance among those differential pairs. In this embodiment, the elongated hole 200 is dimensions, along the front-to-back direction, not less than 70% of the horizontal section of the contacts at positions 5 and 8 while not less than 40% of the horizontal section of the contacts at positions 4 and 9. Generally speaking, in the transverse direction there are three differential pairs at positions 2/3, 6/7 and 10/11, and the invention is to provide the enlarged hole 200 around positions 4/5 and 8/9 to eliminate the crosstalk among those differential pairs. In this embodiment, the holes 150G and 150H are located around the base 119, the holes 150E and 140F are located around the stepped portion 115, and holes 150A, 150B and 150C are positions corresponding to the mating surfaces. That is said, the main body of the shielding plates includes a front section 1301, a middle section 1302 and a rear section 1303 in a row and corresponding to a front portion of the mating tongue in front of the stepped portion, the stepped portion and the rear base. The elongate holes 200 continuously extend from the front section 1301 to the rear section 1303.
From a technical viewpoint, around the area between the position 4 and position 6, the elongated large hole 200 extends from zone C to zone H in the front-to-back direction. As shown in
While a preferred embodiment in accordance with the present disclosure has been shown and described, equivalent modifications and changes known to persons skilled in the art according to the spirit of the present disclosure are considered within the scope of the present disclosure as described in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of and priority to, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/746,008, filed Oct. 16, 2018, the contents of which are incorporated entirely herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62746008 | Oct 2018 | US |