Applicants claim priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of Japanese Application No. 2007-321339 filed Dec. 12, 2007.
This invention relates to an electrical connector for electrically connecting two connection objects, wherein “electrical connector” is simply referred to as “connector” hereinafter.
JP-A 2006-310140 discloses a connector which comprises an elastic member having a surface and a conductive film placed on the surface, disclosure of JP-A 2006-310140 being incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. This structure allows that low contact-pressure can maintain electrical connections between the connector and the connection objects without soldering. However, the disclosed connector has a problem that, if a contact portion of the connection object is contaminated by oil, grease or other fluid material, the contaminated contact portion may have a large resistance.
JP-A 2001-257047 or JP-A 2001-266990 disclose a connector different in type from the connector disclosed in JP-A 2006-310140, disclosure of JP-A 2001-257047 and JP-A 2001-266990 being incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. The connector comprises contact portions each having a plurality of projections. The projections clean up solder balls of a connection object when the contact portions of the connector come into contact with the solder balls of the connection object. However, the projections are required to resist abrasion.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a connector that has a simple structure and solves the problem mentioned above.
One aspect of the present invention provides a connector configured to electrically connect two connection objects. The connector comprises an elastic member having a surface and a conductive film placed on the surface of the elastic member. The conductive film comprises two contact portions to be brought into contact with the connection objects, respectively, and a connect portion connecting the contact portions. Each of the contact portions comprises projections and a drainage arranged, at least in part, between the projections.
An appreciation of the objectives of the present invention and a more complete understanding of its structure may be had by studying the following description of the preferred embodiment and by referring to the accompanying drawings.
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and will herein be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the drawings and detailed description thereto are not intended to limit the invention to the particular form disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
With reference to
With reference to
With reference to
The base projections 124 of the insulation film 120 may be formed through an etching process, a laser process, a blasting process or a matting process. The etching process comprises: forming on a base material of the insulation film 120 a resist member for example, a resist film, a resist coating or the like; patterning the resist member; etching the base material with acid or alkali solutions by using the patterned resist member as a mask; and removing the resist member. Other etching techniques, such as an ion etching, may be used. The laser process comprises: directly forming the base projections 124 on a base material of the insulation film 120 by the use of a laser device; or forming a patterned mask on base material of the insulation film 120 and exposing the base material to beams of a laser-device to form the base projections 124. The blasting process comprises: forming a resist member on a base material of the insulation film 120; patterning the resist member; blasting abrasive agents to the base material by the use of the patterned resist member as a mask to form the base projections 124; and removing the patterned resist member. The matting process comprises, in addition to the steps of the etching process or the blasting process, matting a surface of the processed base material.
The drainage 134 allows that, even if the contact portion 131 is contaminated by grease or the like, the grease or the like is pushed into the drainage 134 when the connector 100 is connected to the connection object. In addition, since the drainages 134 of the embodiment are formed across the contact portion 131, the grease or the like can be pushed out to the outside of the contact portion 131 through the drainage 134 even when the grease or the like has a large amount.
Analyses have been made about the above-mentioned connector 100 for the purpose of evaluating connection capabilities of the connectors. A sample of the conductive film 140 was formed and was evaluated by an evaluator 500 as shown in
The sample of the conductive film 140 was made as follows. An aramid system film having a thickness of 4 micro meters was used as a base film. The base film is processed so that the insulation film 120 with the base projections 124 is obtained. A conductive pattern 130 was formed on the insulation film 120 so that the projections 132 and the drainages 134 were formed. The conductive pattern 130 was made of Au (0.3 micro meters), Ni (0.5 micro meters) and Cu (3 micro meters). Each of the projections 132 has a rectangular block shape having 30 micro meters square by 3 micro meters high and was arranged on the contact portion 131 at 60 micro meters intervals. A comparative example was also prepared by forming a conductive pattern on an insulation film with no base projection. The sample of the conductive film 140 is positioned between the Cu electrode pads 522 and the rubber sheet 530 with the contact potions 131 brought into contact with the Cu electrode pads 522, respectively. A measurement has been carried out for a resistance of the contact portion 131 in a state where the conductive film 140 is pushed by the columnar probe 550. Analyses were made for a case where grease is applied to the conductive films 140 and for another case without grease. A thickness of the grease coating the Cu electrode pads was about 0.01 millimeter. The measurement has also been carried out for the comparative example.
It is clear from
Although the above-described projections 132 of each contact portion 131 are constituted by the base projection 124 of the insulation film 120 and the conductive pattern 130 formed on the base projection 124, the present invention is not limited thereto. For example, as shown in
The projections 132a and the drainage 134a of the conductive pattern 130a may be obtained by forming an original pattern having predetermined areas corresponding to the contact portions 131a, respectively, followed by exposing the predetermined areas of the original pattern to an etching process, a laser process, a blasting process or a matting process, wherein the original pattern is for example a conductive film disclosed in JP-A 2006-310140 and has a predetermined thickness. The etching process comprises: forming on the original pattern a resist member such as a resist film or a resist coating; patterning the resist member; etching the original pattern with acid or alkali solutions by using the patterned resist member as a mask; and removing the resist member. Other etching techniques, such as an ion etching, may be used. The laser process comprises: directly forming the projections 132a on the original pattern by the use of a laser device; or forming a patterned mask on the original pattern and exposing the original pattern to beams of a laser-device to form the projections 132a. The blasting process comprises: forming a resist member on the original pattern; patterning the resist member; blasting abrasive agents to the original pattern by the use of the patterned resist member as a mask to form the projections 132a; and removing the patterned resist member. The matting process comprises, in addition to the steps of the etching process or the blasting process, matting a surface of the processed original pattern. In this embodiment, another conductive material such as a gold plated film may be further laminated on the original pattern processed by the etching process, the laser process or the blasting process.
Each of the projections 132 of the contact portion 131 has a rectangular block shape. Other shapes of the projections can be adapted as long as the drainage 134 can be arranged between the projections 132. For example, as shown in
With reference to
The connector 100e comprises a conductive film 140e. The conductive film 140e of the second embodiment comprises an insulation film 120e and a conductive pattern 130e formed on the insulation film 120e. The conductive pattern 130e has two predetermined areas corresponding to the contact portions 131e, respectively, and is provided with thin lines. The thin lines are formed on the predetermined areas. Neighboring thin lines in each predetermined area are separated from each other by an interval. As shown in
Even if a contaminant 700 such as grease is placed on the pad 600 of the connection object, as shown in the left figure of
The insulation film 120e may have other structural forms. For example, as shown in
As shown in
The connector of the present invention may have a combined feature described in the first and the second embodiments and the variations thereof. For example, a part of the drainage described in the first embodiment may be removed so that the insulation film is partially exposed. In addition, cuts or slits may be formed on the exposed portion of the insulation film.
The present application is based on a Japanese patent application of JP 2007-321339 filed before the Japan Patent Office on Dec. 12, 2007, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
While there has been described what is believed to be the preferred embodiment of the invention, those skilled in the art will recognize that other and further modifications may be made thereto without departing from the spirit of the invention, and it is intended to claim all such embodiments that fall within the true scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007-321339 | Dec 2007 | JP | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090156020 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |