The present invention relates generally to an electrical connector, and more particularly to the electrical connector having a structure reducing resonances in the connector, especially when the higher frequencies the contacts experience.
Resonances related to the ground conductor structures in connectors are a common issue for connector designers. These resonances are typically recognized in the insertion loss and cross talk, S-Parameter, performance of connectors. Standard's requirements and customer's expectations are that the performance of connectors has no resonances within the connector application's bandwidth. For applications utilizing NRZ signaling this bandwidth is at least up to ½ the data rate in terms of frequency and for applications utilizing PAM4 signaling this would be at least up to ¼ of the data rate. Consequently, as data rates increase the resonances have to be addressed to increasing frequencies. Addressing this becomes more challenging at higher frequencies. Current known methods for improving resonance performance in connectors are based on either pushing resonances out higher in frequency and/or dampening resonances. The former is to periodically interconnect the ground terminals within the connector. The latter is to dampen the resonances with the connector wherein one know method is to use the conductive “loose” plastic which is essentially uneconomic, and another known method is to adjust the ratio of air between the adjacent two signal terminals relative to that between the signal terminal and the ground terminal, or the ratio of separation applied thereto as well.
An electrical connector having economic structure to overcome resonances is desired.
An object of the invention is to provide an electrical connector comprises an insulative housing forming a receiving slot in a vertical direction, a pair of contact wafers side by side stacked and retained to the insulative housing. Each of the contact wafers comprises an insulative plate and a plurality of contacts embedded within the insulative plate. The plurality of contacts comprises a plurality of grounding contacts and plural differential-pair contacts alternately arranged with each other along the vertical direction. Each contact includes a contacting section extending beyond a front edge of the insulative plate and into the receiving slot, a tail section exposed outside of a bottom edge of the insulative plate and a connecting section linked between the contacting section and the tail section. The insulative plate includes a plurality of first through holes formed along the connecting section of each grounding contact and exposing to an outer exterior in a thickness direction of the insulative plate, and a plurality of second through holes formed along the connecting sections of each pair of the differential-pair contacts and exposing to an outer exterior in the thickness direction. The first through holes and the second through hole are essentially offset from each other in both the first direction and the second direction which are perpendicular to each other.
Referring to
The insulative plate 650 includes a plurality of first through holes 652 formed along the connecting section 636 of each grounding contact 630G and extending therethrough in the transverse direction, i.e., the thickness direction of the plate, and a plurality of second through holes 654 formed along the connecting sections 636 of each set of the differential-pair contacts 630S and extending therethrough in the transverse direction. The first through holes 652 and the second through hole 654 are essentially offset from each other in both the first direction and the second direction which are perpendicular to each other wherein the first direction extends along an extension direction of the connecting section 636 while the second direction extends along a lateral/spanned direction in which the connecting sections 636 of the contacts 630 are spaced from one another. Therefore, the first direction and the second direction are perpendicular to each other. Notably, the connecting sections 636 of the contacts 630 are categorized with three zones each having the different first direction from others wherein the extension direction of the connecting section 636 in the zone closer to the tail section 634 extends in a vertical direction, that in the zone closer to the contacting section 632 extends in a horizontal/front-to-back direction, and that of the zone therebetween extends in an oblique direction, as shown in
In this embodiment, the connecting sections 636G of the grounding contact 630G is larger/wider than connecting sections 636S of the differential-pair contacts 636S. A metallic shielding plate 670 is sandwiched between the pair of contact wafers 620 in the transverse direction. A rear fastener 680 secured the pair of contact wafers 620 together. The housing 610 and the pair of contact wafers 620 with the shielding plate 670 are assembled together as a subassembly 602. A top fastener 682 and the lower fastener 684 secure the subassembly 602 together. An enclosure 660 receives the housing 610 so as to finalize the whole connector 200. The upper fastener 682 includes an upper plate 6821, a front plate folded rearward and inserting into the receiving slot 112 and two upright plates 6823 which sandwich the two contact wafers 620. The insulative housing includes two rear boards 614 and the enclosure 660 includes two rear plates 6601. A retaining portion 6602 are formed at each rear plate 6601.
As shown in
As shown in
However, the disclosure is illustrative only, changes may be made in detail, especially in matter of shape, size, and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of, and priority to, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/826,991, filed Mar. 30, 2019, the contents of which are incorporated entirely herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62826991 | Mar 2019 | US |