The present disclosure relates generally to electronic components, and more specifically, to electronic connectors.
Various types of connections may be used to connect circuit components to a circuit board. One type of connection is a press-fit connection made through the pressing of a press-fit pin into a circuit board through a hole in the circuit board. The press-fit pin is designed to be inserted into a plated through hole in the circuit board and provide an electro-mechanical connection. Press-fit pins provide faster assembly and are more cost effective as compared to soldering.
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
In one embodiment, an eye of needle (EON) press-fit pin generally comprises a base, a tip, and a compliant portion extending longitudinally between the base and the tip and comprising a pair of resilient deformable arms joined at opposite ends and defining an opening therebetween. The arms each comprise an outer surface for at least partial engagement with walls of an electrical via upon insertion therein. The outer surface of each of the arms comprises a central segment having a flat longitudinal surface and converges from the central segment towards the base and the tip. The arms each further comprise an inner surface defining the opening and forming an elongated portion at each end of the opening for stress relief.
In another embodiment, an apparatus generally comprises an electrical connector for insertion into an electrical via of a circuit board, the electrical connector comprising a pair of resilient arms joined at a proximal end and a distal end, the arms spaced from one another to define an opening therebetween. The opening comprises a central portion in which the arms are spaced from one another and extend generally parallel to one another, an upper portion in which the arms converge towards the proximal end, and a lower portion in which the arms converge towards the distal end. The opening is shaped to form a stress relief area at the proximal and distal ends.
In yet another embodiment, a press-fit pin generally comprises a tip for insertion of the press-fit pin into an electrical via, a compliant portion comprising a pair of resilient arms configured to deform when inserted into the electrical via, a crossbar extending horizontally between the arms, and a neck connecting the compliant portion to a base. The arms are spaced from one another to define an opening. The opening comprises a central portion, an upper portion, and a lower portion. The arms converge from the central portion towards an upper end and a lower end. Each of the upper end and the lower end of the opening comprises an elongated portion defining a stress relief area.
Further understanding of the features and advantages of the embodiments described herein may be realized by reference to the remaining portions of the specification and the attached drawings.
The following description is presented to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the embodiments. Descriptions of specific embodiments and applications are provided only as examples, and various modifications will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. The general principles described herein may be applied to other applications without departing from the scope of the embodiments. Thus, the embodiments are not to be limited to those shown, but are to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features described herein. For purpose of clarity, details relating to technical material that is known in the technical fields related to the embodiments have not been described in detail.
Circuit boards typically include electrical vias that receive press-fit pins for electronically connecting the circuit board to another electrical device (e.g., component, electrical connector, another circuit board, cable, power source). An electrical connection in the circuit board may be made through the pressing of a press-fit pin into the circuit board through the via in the circuit board. The cross-sectional diameter of the press-fit pin is greater than a diameter of the circuit board via. The difference between the press-fit pin cross-sectional diameter and the circuit board via diameter results in deformation of an internal wall of the circuit board via, the press-fit pin, or both during the process of inserting the press-fit pin into the circuit board via. This deformation creates a snug electrical connection between the press-fit pin and the circuit board.
Many press-fit pins are designed with an eye of needle (EON) in the form of a needle eye with arms that surround the EON forming a continuous concave curve. A major advantage of the EON design is that it is possible to scale down the size of the press-fit pin and it is relatively easy to manufacture (e.g., using a stamping process) as compared to more complex designs. However, conventional EON press-fit pin designs have a number of drawbacks. For example, conventional EON geometries often result in an uneven force distribution over the length of the press-fit pin when the pin is inserted into the circuit board via and the arms are deformed. Also, if the circuit board has a large tolerance of a plated through hole (PTH), conventional press-fit pins may not provide sufficient retention forces.
Plated through hole diameters have dropped dramatically overtime from 0.040 inches down to 0.032 inches, 0.022 inches, 0.018 inches, and now as low as 0.016 and 0.012 inches, as a result of higher pin density and the signal integrity advantages of smaller holes. Additional issues arise with conventional EON press-fit pins as pin sizes are further reduced, which makes the design of a robust press-fit pin for a smaller finished hole more difficult. For example, the tolerance percentage of the plated through hole increases with smaller holes, making it more difficult to provide an electrical connector with a low insertion force and high retention force. With smaller diameter holes, additional failure modes such as buckling deformation, poor engagement force, or even dislodgement of the connector from the circuit may occur more often.
The embodiments described herein provide a compliant press-fit pin that will deform during insertion into a plated through hole and sustain a permanent contact normal force to secure electrical and mechanical connections with a geometry that provides increased retention force, reduced insertion force, and compensates for a large tolerance plated through hole to ensure low contact resistance with small deformation of the plated through hole.
Referring now to the drawings, and first to
As shown in the front view in
The opening 14 extends longitudinally within the conductive body 12 of the press-fit pin 10 from the neck 16 to an upper end of the tip portion 18. The opening 14 is defined by a pair of resiliently deformable arms 20 that are connected at their proximal end (near base 15) and distal end (near tip 18) and are spaced apart to define the opening 14 therebetween. The compliant portion 17 of the body 12 is configured to be compressed as it is received in the electrical via such that inner surfaces (edges) 21 of the arms 20 are moved inward toward one another, thereby reducing the EON (opening) 14. Outer contact surfaces (edges) 23 of the arms 20 contact the plated wall of the electrical via, at least partially engaging an interior wall of the via as described below with respect to
As described in detail below, stress relief areas 32, 34 may be formed in upper (proximal) and lower (distal) ends of the opening 14, respectively, to maintain as much elastic region as possible, compensate for extra deformation that may be present during insertion of the press-fit pin into the via due to a lower tolerance limit, and provide sufficient retention force for an upper tolerance limit. In one or more embodiments, a central segment (central portion) 26 of the compliant portion 17 (inner surface 21, outer surface 23, or both surfaces of the arms 20) may include a longitudinally extending flat surface to enhance retention force. Thus, at least a small longitudinal section (e.g., 0.002 inch) of each arm 20 may extend generally parallel to the other arm at the central segment 26. For smaller diameter press-fit pins the length of this longitudinally extending flat section may be even smaller.
As the press-fit pin 10 is inserted into the electrical via 27, outer surfaces 23 of the resilient arms 20 at least partially engage the electrically conductive material 30 on the interior wall of the electrical via and the arms are deflected inwardly toward one another. As described below, the geometry of the press-fit pin 10 is configured such that the deformed pin will be in full (or substantially full) contact with the plated hole 27 after insertion. The deflection of the arms 20 causes the arms to exert spring forces against the electrically conductive material 30. Engagement between the arms 20 and the electrically conductive material 30 of the via 27 electrically connects the press-fit pin 10 and the via. The spring forces exerted by the arms 20 provide a retention force. The difference between the press-fit pin's diameter and diameter of the via 27 results in deformation of the press-fit pin 10 and the conductive layer 30 of the via, which creates a snug electrical connection between the press-fit pin and interior wall of the via. Tuning of the profile geometry of the press-fit pin 10 allows for a greater portion (e.g., most or substantially all) of the outer surface 23 of the arms 20 to be in full contact with the plated through hole after insertion of the press-fit pin into the via 27, as described below. After the arms 20 are deformed upon insertion of the press-fit pin 10 into the via 27, the opening 14 is compressed creating a narrower and generally uniform slot, as shown in
Referring again to
The geometry shown in
As previously noted, the press-fit pin geometry is designed to maintain as much elastic region as possible and compensate for the extra deformation due to the lower tolerance limit of the finished hole while providing sufficient retention force for the upper tolerance limit. The convergent design optimizes the trade-off between the retention force and the insertion force and addresses the issues that arise from the large tolerance limit of the plated through hole of the electrical via in the printed circuit board.
Rather than forming a continuous oval, each end of the opening 14 extends into a longitudinal narrow slot 32, 34 (
The elongated portions are defined by generally parallel inner surfaces 21 of the arms 20 that lead to partial circle or semi-circle transverse openings (as viewed from the front of the pin as shown in
The elongated portion 32, 42, 52 at the proximal end extends into the neck portion of the press-fit pin and terminates before reaching the base 15, 45, 55 (
As previously noted, in addition to the stress relief at each end of the opening 14, 40, 50, the central segment 26, 46, 56 of the arms may comprise a longitudinal flat surface to enhance the retention force of the inserted press-fit pin 10, 38, 39, in one or more embodiments. The flat surface is generally located at a segment where an apex of an oval opening would be located and may extend, for example, over an area from between 5% and 10% of the longitudinal length of the opening 14, 40, 50. In one example, both the inner surface 21 and outer surface 23 of the arms 20 of the central segment are formed with a flat surface (
The following provides examples of overall dimensions of the press-fit pin shown in
In one or more embodiments, the press-fit pin may include a crossbar 62 extending between arms 60 as shown in
In one or more of the embodiments, the total length of the press-fit pin decreases gradually as the diameter of the pin decreases (for use in smaller diameter vias) to improve the signal integrity performance. However, this may also increase the insertion force while reducing the length of the pin. Therefore, there is a trade-off between the insertion force and the signal integrity performance. The crossbar 62 (
The press-fit pin described herein may be used, for example, to provide electrical connections in a circuit board for use in a network device. The network device may comprise, for example, a programmable machine that may be implemented in hardware, software, or any combination thereof. The network device may include one or more processor, memory, and network interfaces. Memory may be a volatile memory or non-volatile storage, which stores various applications, operating systems, modules, and data for execution and use by the processor. The network interfaces may comprise any number of interfaces (e.g., line cards, ports) for receiving data or transmitting data to other devices.
In one or more embodiments, the network device operates in a data communications network including multiple network devices. The network device may comprise, for example, a router, switch, server, or other network device, which may communicate over one or more networks (e.g., local area network (LAN), metropolitan area network (MAN), wide area network (WAN), virtual private network (VPN) (e.g., Ethernet virtual private network (EVPN), layer 2 virtual private network (L2VPN)), virtual local area network (VLAN), wireless network, enterprise network, corporate network, data center, Internet, intranet, radio access network, public switched network, or any other network).
Although the apparatus has been described in accordance with the embodiments shown, one of ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize that there could be variations made without departing from the scope of the embodiments. Accordingly, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
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