Power and data may be provided from one electronic device to another over cables that may include one or more wires, fiber optic cables, or other conductors. Connector inserts may be located at each end of these cables and may be inserted into connector receptacles in the communicating or power transferring devices.
These connector receptacles may be located in openings in enclosures of electronic devices. In some circumstances, it may be desirable to combine more than one connector receptacle into a single unit, which may be referred to as a combined connector receptacle.
Various problems may arise when connector receptacles are gathered into a combined connector receptacle. For example, it may be difficult to align multiple connector receptacles to openings in an enclosure of an electronic device. This may be particularly true when the surface of the enclosure is nonplanar.
Also, contacts in each connector receptacle may convey high-speed signals, power supplies, and other signals. The high-speed signals may have relatively fast edges. These fast edges may have high-frequency signal components that may degrade nearby power supplies. The high-frequency signal components from the high-speed signals and nearby power supplies may couple onto high-speed signal contacts in the same or other connector receptacle in the combined connector receptacle, thereby degrading the performance of the same or other connector receptacle.
Contacts in a connector receptacle may terminate in through-hole contact portions that may be inserted into corresponding openings in a board during device assembly. Including more than one connector receptacle in a combined connector receptacle may make the insertion of the through-hole contact portions more complicated. Specifically, the number of contacts and corresponding through-hole contact portions may increase, thereby making alignment of the through-hole contact portions to corresponding openings in a board more difficult.
Thus, what is needed are combined connector receptacles that may be aligned to openings in a device enclosure, may provide isolation between individual connector receptacles, may have reduced noise coupling to high-speed signal contacts within a connector receptacle, and may have structures arranged to reduce or eliminate damage to through-hole contact portions during their insertion into corresponding openings in a printed circuit board.
Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention may provide combined connector receptacles that may be aligned to openings in a device enclosure, may provide isolation between individual connector receptacles, may have reduced noise coupling to high-speed signal contacts within a connector receptacle, and may have structures arranged to reduce or eliminate damage to through-hole contact portions during their insertion into corresponding openings in a printed circuit board.
An illustrative embodiment of the present invention may provide a combined connector receptacle having a housing with a number of slots. Each slot may be shielded with an electromagnetic interference (EMI) contact rail. Individual connector receptacles may be inserted into each slot. The individual connector receptacles may physically float relative to the housing of the combined connector receptacle. This floating may provide enough leeway or tolerance such that each connector receptacle may be aligned with an opening in a device enclosure. This floating may also provide protection for the connector receptacle during insertion of a connector insert. An alignment pin that may be inserted in an opening or recess of a device enclosure may also be included as part of the combined connector receptacle.
These and other embodiments of the present invention may provide a combined connector receptacle that may be used to provide multiple connector receptacles where a surface of the device enclosure is nonplanar. For example, a top of a housing for the combined connector receptacle may have openings that are oblique to other openings in the combined connector housing. Connector receptacle portions, such as connector receptacle tongues, may emerge from the openings at oblique angles as well.
These and other embodiments of the present invention may provide a combined connector receptacle having improved EMI isolation between individual connector receptacles. For example, a combined connector receptacle may include a housing having a number of slots. Each slot may be shielded using an EMI contact rail. Individual connector receptacles may be inserted into each slot. Each connector receptacle may be individually shielded. Also, each tongue of a connector receptacle may include a central ground plane to isolate contacts on a top side of a tongue from contacts on a bottom side of the tongue. The housing of the combined connector receptacle may be further shielded. The shields around the connector receptacles, the central ground plane, and the shields around the housing of the combined connector receptacle may include tabs or through-hole contact portions that may be fit in openings in a printed circuit board or other appropriate substrate where they may be connected to ground planes or traces. These several layers of shielding may provide a combined connector receptacle having improved EMI isolation between individual connector receptacles. The combined connector receptacle may be mounted on the printed circuit board or other appropriate substrate such that the tongues of the individual connector receptacles are substantially orthogonal to the printed circuit board, though they may be at least somewhat oblique to the printed circuit board due to the nonplanar nature surface of the device enclosure. In these and other embodiments of the present invention, the tongues may be located in openings in a device enclosure or portion of a device enclosure to form a complete connector receptacle with a tongue and recess. The device enclosure or portion of a device enclosure may be metallic, plastic, or other material. Openings in the device enclosure or portion of a device enclosure may include spring fingers to be electrically connected to shields of the connector receptacles. This may further improve EMI isolation between individual connector receptacles and between the combined connector receptacle and other circuits or components.
These and other embodiments of the present invention may provide a combined connector receptacle having improved EMI isolation within individual connector receptacles. For example, each tongue of a connector receptacle may include a central ground plane to isolate contacts on a top side of a tongue from contacts on a bottom side of the tongue. Contacts for each high-speed differential pair on a top or bottom side of the tongue may be adjacent on each lateral side to a power supply or ground contact such that a power supply or ground contact may be between nearby high-speed differential pair signal contacts. These power supply or ground contacts between high-speed differential pair signal contacts may isolate the high-speed differential pair signal contacts.
To further improve this isolation, these power supply or ground contacts may each be coupled to the central ground plane by decoupling capacitors. In these and other embodiments of the present invention, the decoupling capacitors may be formed using a high-dielectric constant structure. Specifically, a high-dielectric constant structure may be placed between a power supply or ground contact and the central ground plane to form a decoupling capacitor. In these and other embodiments of the present invention, other types of decoupling capacitors may be used. For example, discrete capacitors, such as ceramic, film, electrolytic, or other types of capacitors, may be used. Biasing members may be included to ensure a good electrical connection between the discrete capacitors and the power and ground contacts and central ground plane. The biasing members may be springs, they may be formed of a conductive and compressible material, or they may be other types of biasing members. These decoupling capacitors may be located in a housing of a combined connector receptacle, in a housing of an individual connector receptacle, in a tongue of a connector receptacle, or elsewhere in a combined connector receptacle.
These and other embodiments of the present invention may provide a combined connector receptacle having a housing with a number of slots. Each slot may be shielded with an EMI contact rail. Individual connector receptacle may be inserted into each slot. The individual connector receptacles may physically float relative to the housing of the combined connector receptacle. This floating may allow through-hole contact portions for the connector receptacles to be aligned to each other. An organizer may be fit over the through-hole contact portions for the various connector receptacles. The through-hole contact portions of the combined connector receptacle may then be inserted into a printed circuit board, such as a printed circuit board or other appropriate substrate.
In these and other embodiments of the present invention, the organizer may be fit against one or more connector receptacles in a combined connector receptacle unit. The through-hole contact portions of the combined connector receptacle unit may then be inserted into corresponding holes in a printed circuit board or other appropriate substrate. In other embodiments of the present invention, the organizer may be positioned away from the combined connector receptacle towards ends of the through-hole contact portions. During assembly, a combined connector receptacle unit may be placed on the printed circuit board such that an organizer contacts or is near the printed circuit board. The combined connector receptacle unit may be pushed onto the printed circuit board such that the organizer is moved towards the combined connector receptacle and the through-hole contact portions are pushed into corresponding openings in a printed circuit board or other appropriate substrate.
While an organizer may be used to align through-hole contact portions to corresponding openings in a printed circuit board, openings in a device enclosure or device enclosure portion may be used to align the tongues of the connector receptacles of a combined connector receptacle. The openings in an inside surface of the device enclosure or device enclosure portion may have tapered lead-ins to guide the individual connector receptacle tongues during mating of the combined connector receptacle to the openings in a device enclosure or device enclosure portion. The device enclosure or device enclosure portion may be at least partially held in place with pieces of foam or other compliant piece. This may allow the device enclosure or device enclosure portion to slightly reposition itself so that it may be easier to mate with the combined connector receptacle. Since the individual connector receptacles may physically float in the housing of the combined connector receptacle, the openings in the device enclosure or device enclosure portion may determine a final position of the tongues of the connector receptacles.
While embodiments of the present invention may be useful in combined connector receptacles, these and other embodiments of the present invention may be used in single connector receptacle structures as well.
In various embodiments of the present invention, contacts, central ground planes, shields, EMI contact rails, and other conductive portions of a combined connector receptacle may be formed by stamping, metal-injection molding, machining, micro-machining, 3-D printing, or other manufacturing process. The conductive portions may be formed of stainless steel, steel, copper, copper titanium, phosphor bronze, or other material or combination of materials. They may be plated or coated with nickel, gold, or other material. The nonconductive portions, such as the housings, tongues, organizers, and other portions may be formed using injection or other molding, 3-D printing, machining, or other manufacturing process. The nonconductive portions may be formed of silicon or silicone, rubber, hard rubber, plastic, nylon, liquid-crystal polymers (LCPs), ceramics, or other nonconductive material or combination of materials. The biasing members and high-dielectric constant structures may be formed of various materials. The printed circuit boards used may be formed of FR-4 or other material. Printed circuit boards may be replaced by other substrates, such as flexible circuit boards, in many embodiments of the present invention.
Embodiments of the present invention may provide combined connector receptacles that may be located in, and may connect to, various types of devices, such as portable computing devices, tablet computers, desktop computers, laptops, all-in-one computers, wearable computing devices, cell phones, smart phones, media phones, storage devices, portable media players, navigation systems, monitors, power supplies, video delivery systems, adapters, remote control devices, chargers, and other devices. These combined connector receptacles may provide pathways for signals that are compliant with various standards such as one of the Universal Serial Bus (USB) standards including USB Type-C, High-Definition Multimedia Interface® (HDMI), Digital Visual Interface (DVI), Ethernet, DisplayPort, Thunderbolt™, Lightning™, Joint Test Action Group (JTAG), test-access-port (TAP), Directed Automated Random Testing (DART), universal asynchronous receiver/transmitters (UARTs), clock signals, power signals, and other types of standard, non-standard, and proprietary interfaces and combinations thereof that have been developed, are being developed, or will be developed in the future. Other embodiments of the present invention may provide combined connector receptacles that may be used to provide a reduced set of functions for one or more of these standards. In various embodiments of the present invention, these interconnect paths provided by these connector inserts and connector receptacles may be used to convey power, ground, signals, test points, and other voltage, current, data, or other information.
Various embodiments of the present invention may incorporate one or more of these and the other features described herein. A better understanding of the nature and advantages of the present invention may be gained by reference to the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings.
This electronic system includes computer 110 and electronic device 130. Computer 110 may communicate with electronic device 130 through cable 150. Specifically, connector insert 140 may be inserted into one of the group of connector receptacles in combined connector receptacle 120 on computer 110, and computer 110 may communicate with an electronic device 130 by sending and receiving signals and power, through conductors in cable 150.
Again, it may be desirable for computer 110 to communicate with several devices. These devices may be able to communicate with computer 110 using the same interface standard. Accordingly, several connector receptacles of the same type may be provided as a combined connector receptacle 120, though in other embodiments of the present invention, two or more connector receptacles in combined connector receptacle 120 may be different from each other. Combined connector receptacle 120 may include a number of individual connector receptacles, each having a number of contacts or pins, which may terminate in through-hole contact portions that are soldered in openings connected to traces in a printed circuit board (not shown) in computer 110.
Unfortunately, when several connector receptacles are provided as a unit, it may be very difficult to align through-hole contact portions for the contacts of the connector receptacles to openings in a printed circuit board. It may also be difficult to align the connector receptacle tongues to corresponding openings in a device enclosure of computer 110. This is particularly true if a surface of the device enclosure for computer 110 is curved at these openings.
Accordingly, an illustrative embodiment of the present invention may provide a combined connector receptacle having a housing with a number of slots. Each slot may be shielded with an EMI contact rail. Individual connector receptacle may be inserted into each slot. The individual connector receptacles may physically float relative to the housing of the combined connector receptacle. This floating may provide enough leeway or tolerance that each connector receptacle may be aligned with an opening in a device enclosure. This floating may also provide protection for the connector during insertion of a connector insert. An alignment pin to fit in an opening or recess of a device enclosure may also be included as part of the combined connector insert. This alignment pin may be conductive or nonconductive. An example of such a combined connector receptacle is shown in the following figures.
Tongues 210 for connector receptacles 200 may emerge from slots 201. Tongues 210 may support a number of contacting portions 221 of contacts 220 on its top and bottom sides. Tongues 210 may further support ground contacts 230 on the top and bottom side. Contacting portions 221 of contacts 220 may mate with corresponding contacts of connector insert 2230 (shown in
Tongues 210 for connector receptacles 200 may emerge from slots 201. Tongues 210 may support a number of contacting portions 221 (shown in
Connector receptacles 200 may be held in place at least partially by dimples 262 (shown in
Again, embodiments of the present invention are well-suited for use in devices where a device enclosure, such as device enclosure 2210 in
While embodiments of the present invention may be useful in combined connector receptacles 120, these and other embodiments of the present invention may be used in single connector receptacle structures. Also, while six connector receptacles 200 are shown in these examples, in these and other embodiments of the present invention, other numbers of connector receptacles 200 may be included.
The connector receptacle contacts 220 may have contact portions 221 on tongues 210 and may emerge from a bottom of housing 260 as through-hole contact portions 222, though in other embodiments of the present invention, they may emerge as surface-mount contact portions. Shields 250 for connector receptacles 200 may terminate in tabs 252. Through-hole contact portions 222 and tabs 252 may be inserted into openings in printed circuit board 510 (shown in
It may be difficult to align these through-hole contact portions 222, tabs 252, and posts 122 in their corresponding holes in printed circuit board 510 in
Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention may employ an organizer 300. Organizer 300 may include openings for some or all of the through-hole contact portions 222, tabs 252, and posts 122. Organizer 300 may keep these structures aligned when combined connector receptacle 120 is mated with a printed circuit board, such as printed circuit board 510 in
Connector receptacles 200 may be inserted into slots 201 in housing 121. Connector receptacles 200 may be inserted between EMI contact rails 128 and intermediate EMI contact rails 310 in slots 201 until dimple 262 is aligned with openings (not shown) in EMI contact rails 128 and intermediate EMI contact rails 310. Tongues 210 may support contacts 220 and ground contacts 230. Tongues 210 may include notches 240 in their sides. Contacts 220 may terminate in through-hole contact portions 222. Shields 250 (shown in
Organizer 300 may include raised portions 320 and 322. Raised portions 320 and 322 may help secure organizer 300 in place along a bottom of combined connector receptacle 120. Tabs 252 may fit into openings 340, while through-hole contact portions 222 may fit in openings 330 of organizer 300. Posts 122 may be inserted through openings 350 in organizer 300. Organizer 300 may prevent “pin crush” from occurring with through-hole contact portions 222 or tabs 252 as the combined connector receptacle 120 is inserted into printed circuit board 510 (shown in
In various embodiments of the present invention, organizer 300 may be installed flush to a bottom surface of a combined connector receptacle 120. In other embodiments of the present invention, organizer 300 may be installed a distance away from the bottom surface of the combined connector receptacle 120. In this embodiment, as the combined connector receptacle 120 is installed, printed circuit board 510 may push the organizer such that it is, or is nearly flush with the bottom side of the combined connector receptacle 120 after insertion. An example is shown in the following figure.
While connector receptacle 200 shown herein may be useful in combined connector receptacles 120, these and other embodiments of the present invention may be used in single connector receptacle structures where only one connector receptacle 200 is included. Also, while six connector receptacles 200 are shown in the above examples, in these and other embodiments of the present invention, other numbers of connector receptacles 200 may be included.
Signals conveyed by contacts 220 in connector receptacle 200 may be shielded by adjacent contacts and a central ground plane. This may help to prevent signal components of a signal conveyed in a connector receptacle 200 from corrupting a second signal in the same or different connector receptacle 200. An example is shown in the following figure.
A central ground plane 232 may extend through the middle of housing 260. Housing 260 may be formed of a top housing portion 268 and a bottom housing portion 269. Central ground plane 232 may terminate in through-hole contact portions 239. In this way, through-hole contact portions 922 for signal contacts 920 may be surrounded by through-hole contact portion 912 for power, through-hole contact portion 932 for ground, and through-hole contact portions 239 for the central ground plane 232. This may provide EMI isolation for the differential signal conveyed on contacts 920, thereby reducing coupling to those contacts and preventing the signals on those contacts from coupling elsewhere in a combined connector receptacle and an electronic device that houses the combined connector receptacle.
Again, differential signals conveyed on contacts 920 (shown in
While high-dielectric constant structure 1310 and high-dielectric constant structure 1320 are shown as being formed in a housing of a connector receptacle, in other embodiments of the present invention, high-dielectric constant structure 1310 and high-dielectric constant structure 1320 may be located elsewhere in a combined connector receptacle or individual connector receptacle, such as in tongue 210. In these and other embodiments of the present invention, tongue 210 may be formed of a printed circuit board. High-dielectric constant structure 1310 and high-dielectric constant structure 1320 may be located in or on layers (not shown) of a printed circuit board forming tongue 210.
Again, in other embodiments of the present invention, other capacitor structures may be used as decoupling capacitors 1210 and 1220. For example, discrete capacitors, such as ceramic, film, electrolytic, or other types of capacitors may be used. One or more biasing elements, such as springs, compressible conductive foams, or other materials may be used to electrically connect a capacitor between a power contact and a central ground plane and a ground contact and the central ground plane. An example is shown in the following figure.
While capacitors 1510 and biasing members 1520 are shown as being located in a housing of a connector receptacle, in other embodiments of the present invention, capacitors 1510 and biasing members 1520 may be located elsewhere in a combined connector receptacle or individual connector receptacle, such as in tongue 210. In these and other embodiments of the present invention, tongue 210 may be formed of a printed circuit board. Capacitors 1510 and biasing members 1520 may be located in or on layers (not shown) of a printed circuit board forming tongue 210.
In
In
In
In
In
Connector receptacles 200 may be shielded by shield 250. Over-shield portion 810 may partially cover shield 250. EMI contact rails 310 may connect shields 250 to each other. EMI contact rail 128 may connect shields 250 for outside connector receptacles 200 to shield 126.
In various embodiments of the present invention, contacts, central ground planes, shields, EMI contact rails, and other conductive portions of a combined connector receptacle may be formed by stamping, metal-injection molding, machining, micro-machining, 3-D printing, or other manufacturing process. The conductive portions may be formed of stainless steel, steel, copper, copper titanium, phosphor bronze, or other material or combination of materials. They may be plated or coated with nickel, gold, or other material. The nonconductive portions, such as the housings, tongues, organizers, and other portions may be formed using injection or other molding, 3-D printing, machining, or other manufacturing process. The nonconductive portions may be formed of silicon or silicone, rubber, hard rubber, plastic, nylon, liquid-crystal polymers (LCPs), ceramics, or other nonconductive material or combination of materials. The biasing members and high-dielectric constant structures may be formed of various materials. The printed circuit boards used may be formed of FR-4 or other material. Printed circuit boards may be replaced by other substrates, such as flexible circuit boards, in many embodiments of the present invention.
Embodiments of the present invention may provide combined connector receptacles that may be located in, and may connect to, various types of devices, such as portable computing devices, tablet computers, desktop computers, laptops, all-in-one computers, wearable computing devices, cell phones, smart phones, media phones, storage devices, portable media players, navigation systems, monitors, power supplies, video delivery systems, adapters, remote control devices, chargers, and other devices. These combined connector receptacles may provide pathways for signals that are compliant with various standards such as one of the Universal Serial Bus (USB) standards including USB Type-C, High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI), Digital Visual Interface (DVI), Ethernet, DisplayPort, Thunderbolt, Lightning™, Joint Test Action Group (JTAG), test-access-port (TAP), Directed Automated Random Testing (DART), universal asynchronous receiver/transmitters (UARTs), clock signals, power signals, and other types of standard, non-standard, and proprietary interfaces and combinations thereof that have been developed, are being developed, or will be developed in the future. Other embodiments of the present invention may provide combined connector receptacles that may be used to provide a reduced set of functions for one or more of these standards. In various embodiments of the present invention, these interconnect paths provided by these connector inserts and connector receptacles may be used to convey power, ground, signals, test points, and other voltage, current, data, or other information.
The above description of embodiments of the invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form described, and many modifications and variations are possible in light of the teaching above. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical applications to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. Thus, it will be appreciated that the invention is intended to cover all modifications and equivalents within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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8968031 | Simmel | Mar 2015 | B2 |
20130330976 | Simmel | Dec 2013 | A1 |
20140364008 | Simmel | Dec 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1337010 | Aug 2003 | EP |