Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6488513
-
Patent Number
6,488,513
-
Date Filed
Thursday, December 13, 200123 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, December 3, 200222 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 439 66
- 439 91
- 439 591
- 439 65
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An interposer assembly includes an insulating plate with passages extending through the thickness of the plate and metal contacts in the passages. The contacts have resilient upper and lower contact arms that deflect into upper and lower recesses of the plate when sandwiched between contact pads of overlying and underlying circuit members. The recesses are sized to accommodate solder connections between contact arms and contact pads.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to interposer assemblies used for forming electrical connections between spaced contact pads on circuit members.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Interposer assemblies are used for forming electrical connections between densely spaced contact pads on adjacent parallel circuit members. Commonly, the circuit members are a circuit board and a ceramic plate carrying integrated circuits. The pads on the members are arranged in identical patterns.
The interposer assembly includes an insulating plate and a plurality of through-contacts carried in the plate and arranged in the same pattern as the pads on the circuit members. The assembly is sandwiched between upper and lower circuit members to form electrical connections between opposed pairs of contact pads.
In one type of interposer assembly, the lower circuit member is permanently held against the bottom side of the plate before the upper circuit member is pressed against the plate. The contact pads on the lower circuit member are soldered to the contacts. This enables the interposer assembly and lower circuit member to form a subassembly that is assembled later with the upper circuit member to interconnect the circuit members.
The contact pads on the lower circuit member each include a solder layer to form the soldered connections. The lower circuit member is pressed against the bottom side of the plate with the solder layer on the pads engaging the contacts. The lower circuit member and interposer plate are placed in a reflow oven to melt the solder layer and solder the contacts and contact pads together. The solder connections form reliable mechanical and electrical connections between the contacts and contact pads and hold the lower circuit member firmly against the plate.
The contacts project above the top surface of the plate of the soldered subassembly. The upper circuit member is pressed against the upper side of the plate with the contact pads on the upper member engaging the contacts. The upper circuit member is held against the plate with the contacts forming electric connections between aligned pairs of pads.
Interposer assemblies form electrical connections between contact pads arranged in very close proximity to each other. The pads may be arranged on a one millimeter center-to-center grid. A number of interposer assemblies may be mounted on a single frame, with thousands of contacts in the frame. In addition to requiring closely spaced contacts, the contacts must make reliable electrical connections with the pads when the assemblies are sandwiched between the circuit members. Failure of a single contact to make a reliable connection renders the entire frame useless.
A low mechanical closure force is required in order to prevent undue stress on a ceramic circuit member. A high closure force could distort or possibly break the ceramic member. Further, interposer assemblies must occupy a minimum width between the circuit members. The contacts must compress and enable the circuit members to be flush against the plate. The contacts must be compliant or resilient enough to deform with a lower closing force and yet must be sufficiently stiff to establish reliable electrical connections between pairs of contact pads.
Conventional interposer assemblies in which one circuit member is soldered to contact pads have contacts that are relatively rigid after being soldered to the contact pads. A high closing force is required to press the other circuit member flush against the interposer plate.
On occasion it may be necessary to replace a circuit member with a substitute circuit member if a defect were found after pressing the circuit member against the interposer plate. The is compressed contacts do not have sufficient resiliency to return to their original projections above the plate after removal of the circuit member. Reengagement of the contacts with the contact pads of the substitute circuit member often results in failure of one or more contacts to form electrical connections.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention is an improved interposer assembly including metal through contacts confined in closely spaced passages extending through an insulating plate. The contacts have resilient upper and lower contact arms that space contact surfaces away from opposite sides of the plate. The contact arms can be compressed against contact pads of circuit members with a low closing force. However, the contact arms are sufficiently resilient to return the contact surfaces away from the plate for reengagement with contact pads if necessary to permit adjustment or replacement of the circuit member.
The upper and lower contact arms of each contact are compressed by the contact pads independently of one another. This permits the contact pads of one circuit member to be soldered to the contact arms on one side of the plate prior to assembly of the interposer assembly with the other circuit member. The compression of the contact arms by the one circuit member does not affect the resiliency and shape of the contact arms on the other side of the plate. The contact arms on the opposite side of the plate remain in position to form reliable pressure connections or solder connections with the contact pads of the other circuit member.
An interposer assembly having features of the present invention includes an insulated plate and a number of metal contacts carried in the plate. The plate is formed from a single piece of insulating material. A number of single contact passages are in the plate, each contact passage including a slot extending through the thickness of the plate, an upper recess extending away from the slot and open to the top surface of the plate, and a lower recess extending away from the slot and open to the bottom surface of the plate. The slot includes a nominal width portion extending from the top surface of the plate and a reduced width portion extending from the bottom surface of the plate. A transverse wall joins the slot portions.
Each contact includes a body portion in a passage slot, with upper and lower contact arms extending from the body portion. A contact surface is on each contact arm, the distance between the contact surfaces greater than the thickness of the plate when the contact arms are unstressed. The contact body portion has a nominal width portion in the nominal width portion of the slot and a reduced width portion in the reduced width portion of the slot and includes an abutment surface abutting the transverse wall of the slot to locate the contact in the contact passage. The upper contact arm extends into the upper recess and overlies a recessed floor of the upper recess and the lower contact arm extends into the lower recess and overlies the floor of the lower recess of the passage.
When a circuit member is pressed against the lower contact arms, each contact arm engages the floor of the lower recess to maintain the position of the contact in the passage slot. This enables the sets of upper and lower contact arms to be deflected essentially independently of one another.
The compressed contact arms move entirely within the upper and lower recesses when the plate is compressed between circuit members. The lower set of recesses is sized to accommodate solder connections in the recesses to enable soldering of the lower contact arms to contact pads. Preferably the upper recesses are also sized to accommodate solder connections in the recesses. This permits identical plates to be used having contacts with upper contact arms configured to form pressure connections or upper contact arms configured to form solder connections to electrically connect with contact pads.
Other objects and features of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds, especially when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings illustrating the invention, of which there are four sheets of drawings and two embodiments are disclosed.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a top view of a first embodiment interposer assembly per the invention;
FIG. 2
is a sectional view taken along line
2
—
2
of
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 3
is a sectional view taken along line
3
—
3
of
FIG. 2
;
FIG. 4
is a view taken along line
4
—
4
of
FIG. 3
;
FIG. 5
is a view similar to
FIG. 2
illustrating the position of the assembly of
FIG. 1
against a lower circuit member;
FIG. 6
is a view similar to
FIG. 5
with the lower circuit member pressed against the lower circuit member and solder connections between the assembly and the lower circuit member;
FIG. 7
is a view similar to
FIG. 6
but with the assembly against an upper circuit member;
FIG. 8
is a view similar to
FIG. 7
with the assembly sandwiched between the upper and lower circuit members;
FIG. 9
is a view similar to
FIG. 3
but illustrating a contact preform inserted in the plate of the assembly shown in
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 10
is a view similar to
FIG. 3
of a second interposer assembly per the invention;
FIG. 11
is a view similar to
FIG. 10
but with the assembly between upper and lower circuit members; and
FIG. 12
is a view similar to
FIG. 11
but with the assembly sandwiched between the upper and lower circuit members and solder connections between the contacts and contact pads of the circuit members.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
First embodiment interposer assembly
10
includes a single-piece plate
12
formed of insulating material. A plurality of metal through contacts
14
are positioned in single contact passages
16
extending through the thickness of the plate between opposed plate top and bottom plate surfaces
18
and
20
. The top and bottom surfaces
18
,
20
are flat and parallel to one another and are separated by the uniform thickness of the plate
12
.
The contact passages
16
are spaced apart from one another in the plate
12
. As shown in
FIGS. 1 through 4
, each passage
16
includes a slot
22
that extends through the thickness of the plate
12
. An upper recess
24
extends from the slot
22
and is open to the top surface of the plate
12
. A lower recess
26
also extends from the slot
22
and is open to the bottom surface of the plate
12
. The recesses
24
,
26
extend in a common direction away from the slot
22
and overlie one another to interconnect vertically aligned pairs of contact pads. In other possible embodiments the upper and lower recesses may extend in different directions from the slot with respect to each other to interconnect laterally offset pairs of contact pads.
The slots
22
are each symmetrical to either side of a central plane extending through the slot
22
and perpendicular to the top and bottom surfaces of the plate. The slot
22
is bounded by a pair of opposed end walls
28
,
29
that define opposite ends of the slot. An upper pair of opposed sidewalls
30
extend inwardly from the top surface of the plate and join the end walls
28
,
29
. The upper sidewalls
30
bound an upper portion of the slot
22
and define a nominal width portion of the slot. A lower pair of opposed sidewalls
34
extend inwardly from the bottom surface of the plate and join the end walls
28
. The lower sidewalls
34
bound a lower portion
36
of the slot
22
and define a reduced width portion of the slot. A transverse wall
38
between the upper and lower pairs of sidewalls extends from the upper sidewalls
30
and joins the lower sidewalls
34
. The transverse wall
38
is parallel with and faces the top surface
18
of the plate
12
. Wall
38
limits insertion of a contact
14
into passage
16
.
The upper recess
22
of each passage
16
includes a floor
40
that faces the top surface
18
of the plate
12
. The floor
40
is spaced inwardly from the top surface of the plate and extends away from the end wall
28
of the passage slot
22
opposite the transverse wall
38
to a recess end wall
42
. The floor
40
slopes from the passage slot
22
towards the top surface of the plate. A pair of opposed sidewalls
44
extend from the top surface of the plate to the floor
40
. The sidewalls
44
are parallel with one another and extend from the slot upper sidewalls
30
, whereby the width of the upper recess
24
between the sidewalls
44
is equal to the nominal width of the slot
22
.
The lower recess
24
of each passage
16
includes a floor
46
that faces the bottom surface
20
of the plate
12
. The floor
46
is spaced inwardly from the top surface of the plate and extends away from the end wall
28
of the passage slot
22
to an end wall
48
. The floor
46
includes a convex arcuate surface
50
extending from the end wall
28
and a flat planar surface
52
that slopes from the arcuate surface
50
towards the top surface of the plate. A pair of opposed sidewalls
54
extend from the bottom surface of the plate to the floor
40
. The sidewalls
54
are parallel with one another and extend from the slot lower sidewalls
30
, whereby the width of the lower recess
26
between the sidewalls
44
is equal to the reduced width of the slot
22
.
The metal contacts
14
are preferably formed from uniform thickness strip stock, which may be suitably plated beryllium copper. The illustrated contacts are 0.0017 inches thick. Each contact
14
is generally C-shaped and includes a flat body or central portion
60
and a pair of upper and lower contact arms
62
,
64
extending from opposite sides of the central portion. The contact arms
62
,
64
form resilient cantilever beams that extend away from the contact body. Contact surfaces
66
,
67
are located on the upper and lower contact arms
62
,
64
respectively for engaging contact pads on circuit members pressed against the plate
12
. The two contact surfaces
66
,
67
are spaced apart a distance greater than the thickness of the plate
12
when the contact is not stressed.
The contact central portion or body
60
includes a nominal width portion
68
adjacent the upper contact arm
62
and a reduced width portion
70
adjacent the lower contact arm
64
that form a contact shoulder
72
. The shoulder
72
faces the lower contact arm
64
and forms an abutment surface that cooperates with a slot wall
38
to locate the contact axially in the slot. This limits movement of the contact
16
towards the bottom surface
20
of the plate
12
and enables the upper contact arm
62
to be compressed independently of the the lower contact arm
64
.
The upper contact arm
62
includes an arcuate spring arm
74
that extends outwardly from the central contact portion to the contact surface
66
and an outer arm portion
76
that extends inwardly from the contact surface
66
to a contact end. The portion of the contact arm in the vicinity of the contact surface
66
is more sharply curved as shown in order for the contact surface
66
to form a pronounced contact nose. The width of the upper contact arm
64
tapers from the nominal width of the contact adjacent the contact body
60
to a reduced-width free end to reduce stress concentration when the upper contact arm
64
is stressed.
The lower contact arm
64
includes an arcuate, inner arm portion
78
adjacent the body portion
60
and an elongate, straight outer arm portion
80
that extends away from the contact body
60
to the contact surface
67
at the free end of the lower contact arm
64
. The arcuate arm portion
78
holds the straight arm portion
80
nearly perpendicular to the contact body
60
as shown in FIG.
2
. The lower contact arm
64
has a uniform width equal to the reduced width of the contact.
The contacts
14
are each held in a passage
16
with the nominal width portion
68
of the contact body
60
in the nominal width portion
32
of the passage slot
22
and the reduced width portion
70
of the contact body
60
in the reduced width portion
36
of the slot. See FIG.
3
. The contact shoulders
72
of the contact
14
abut the transverse wall
38
of the passage
22
. The shoulders
72
and wall
38
cooperate with each other to locate the contact body portion
60
in the passage
16
and limit movement of the contact in the passage
16
towards the lower surface of the plate
12
.
The contact body portions
68
,
70
and the slot portions
32
,
36
have substantially rectangular lateral cross sections that cooperate to align the contact body in the slot. The contact body portions
68
,
70
are closely spaced from the slot end walls
28
,
29
and slot sidewalls
30
,
34
to maintain vertical alignment of the contact in the passage. The upper contact arm
62
extends away from the slot end wall
29
towards the upper recess
24
and overlies the floor
40
of the recess
24
. The contact nose
66
is spaced above the top surface of the plate
12
. The free end of the contact arm
62
is located within the upper recess
24
to prevent the end from being caught between the plate
12
and a circuit member. The lower contact arm
64
extends away from the slot end wall
29
towards the lower recess
26
. The arcuate portion
78
of the contact arm
64
substantially conforms with and closely faces or bears against the arcuate surface
50
of the floor
46
. The leg
80
is spaced above the floor of the lower recess floor
46
with the contact surface
67
spaced below the bottom surface of the plate
12
.
The arcuate floor surface
50
and the arcuate lower contact arm portion
78
cooperate with each other to prevent or limit movement or float of the contact
14
in the passage
16
towards the upper plate surface
18
. Any float is insufficient to enable the free end of the upper contact arm
62
to escape from the upper recess
24
, and retains the contact
14
in the passage
16
.
As illustrated in
FIG. 1
, the passages
16
are arranged close to each other in a dense array on plate
12
to permit forming electrical connections between similar arrays of contact pads on circuit members located above and below the interposer assembly
10
. Conventionally, assembly
10
is used for soldered connections between contact pads on a lower circuit member and pressure connections on the contact pads on an upper circuit member. The circuit members may include circuit boards or other types of circuit elements.
FIG. 5
illustrates the interposer assembly
10
positioned adjacent a lower circuit member
90
prior to solder connections being formed between the contacts
14
and the circuit member. The contact pads
92
on the member are below each contact in the assembly and include a solder layer
94
. The lower contact surfaces
67
lightly engage the pads and the contacts are not stressed.
FIG. 6
illustrates the assembly
10
when the lower circuit member
90
is pressed tightly against the plate
12
. When the member
90
is brought into contact with the plate
12
the contact pads
92
bend the lower contact arm
64
of each contact
14
entirely within the lower recesses
26
. The resiliency of the lower contact arm
64
enables the contact arm
64
to compress without applying a high closing force to the circuit member
90
.
The arcuate portion
78
of the lower contact arm
64
bears against the facing arcuate surface
50
of the lower floor
46
a short distance from the slot
22
. The torque generated by the closing force applied against the contact surface
67
of the lower contact arm urges rotation of the contact counterclockwise as seen in FIG.
6
and maintains the contact shoulders
70
against the slot wall
38
. This effectively permits the contact arms
62
,
64
to be compressed independently of each other and maintains the contact body
60
in the same location of the passage slot
22
before and after the circuit member
90
is pressed against the plate
12
. The straight arm portion
80
comes parallel with the contact pad
92
and lies flat against the contact pad. The arm portion
80
has sufficient resiliency to space the contact surface
67
outwardly away from the bottom surface of the plate if the lower circuit member
90
must be removed prior to soldering.
After the circuit member
90
is pressed against the plate
12
, each lower contact arm
64
is located entirely within a lower recess
26
. The contact pads
92
preferably close the openings of the passage slots
22
and lower recesses
26
to the bottom surface of the plate. Solder connections
96
are then formed between the legs
80
and the contact pads
92
, preferably by conventional reflow soldering. The volume of each lower recess
26
is sized to accommodate the solder connection entirely within the recess. The relatively large bearing area between the straight arm portions
80
and the contact pads ensure the solder connections form reliable electrical and mechanical connections between the lower contact arm portions
80
and the contact pads
102
.
When the solder connections
96
cool and solidify, the contact shoulders
70
and the arcuate lower contact arm portions
78
grip the plate
12
between them. This securely holds the lower circuit member
90
against the plate
12
to form an interposer subassembly for subsequent handling and assembly with an upper circuit member.
The conductor bodies
60
snugly fit between the sidewalls of the passage slots
22
to prevent the flow of melted solder in the lower plate recesses
26
into the upper recesses
24
. Such solder flow in any passage
16
could contact the upper contact arms
62
in the passage and adversely affect the resiliency of the spring arm
74
. The clearance between the sidewalls and each contact body
60
is sufficiently small to resist flow of melted solder through the passage slot from the lower recess
26
into the upper recess
24
. Alternatively, a contact body
60
can be press fit in a passage slot
22
to close fluid communication through the plate between the upper and lower recesses of the passage and obstruct the flow of solder through the passage slot.
FIG. 7
illustrates the interposer assembly
10
and lower circuit member
90
positioned adjacent an upper circuit member
100
prior to pressure connections being formed between the contacts
14
and the circuit member
100
. Contact pads
102
on the upper circuit member are above the contacts
14
in the assembly
10
. The upper contact noses
66
lightly engage the pads and the contacts are not stressed. The contact noses
66
are spaced above the top surface
18
of the plate
12
a sufficient distance to compensate for spacing variations caused by manufacturing tolerances while assuring sufficient contact pressure can be generated between each contact nose
66
and contact pad
102
to form a reliable electrical pressure connection between them.
FIG. 8
illustrates the assembly
10
when the upper circuit member
100
is pressed tightly against the plate
12
. When the member
100
is brought into contact with the plate
12
the contact pads
102
bend the upper contact arm
62
of each contact
14
entirely within the upper recess
24
. The spring arm
72
of the contact arm
62
acts as a cantilever spring and is elastically bent. The resiliency of the spring arm enables the contact arm
62
to compress with a low closing force. Bending of the spring arm
72
and foreshortening of the contact moves or wipes the contact nose
66
a distance along the contact pad
102
toward the passage slot
22
to make a clean, low resistance pressure electrical connections between the contact nose
66
and the pad
102
.
Contact pressure is maintained by the elastic bending of the spring arm
72
without bottoming the end of the upper contact arm
62
on the upper recess floor
40
. Such bottoming of contact ends could undesirably increase the closing force. Should the end of an upper contact arm ever bottom on the floor
40
, the slope of the floor
40
guides the legs down the recess to minimize additional closing force. If it is necessary to replace or reseat the upper circuit member
100
the elasticity of the spring arms
72
return the contact noses
66
above the top surface of the plate for later reengagement with the contact pads
102
.
The solder connections and the clean wiped pressure connections assure that the contacts
14
provide reliable, low resistance electrical paths between the upper and lower sets of contact pads.
The contacts
14
are formed from contact preforms
110
, see
FIG. 9
, after the preforms
110
are inserted in the plate
12
. A contact preform
110
is otherwise identical to a contact
14
except that the lower contact arm
64
is yet to be formed from a lower contact arm preform
112
planar with and extending away from the reduced width contact body portion
70
. The remainder of the contact
14
is preformed to minimize variations in contact nose
66
spacing when the contacts are inserted in the passages
16
.
Each contact preform
110
is inserted into a contact passage
16
from the top surface
18
of the plate
12
. The contact arm preform
112
is inserted into the nominal width portion
32
and enters the reduced width portion
36
of the passage slot
22
. The contact arm preform
112
is inserted yet further into the slot until the shoulders
72
of the contact body
60
abuts the transverse slot wall
38
and prevents further insertion of the contact.
At this point the contact preform
110
is located in the contact passage
16
as shown in
FIG. 9
with the contact arm preform
112
extending away from the plate bottom surface
20
. The upper spring arm
62
is in its unstressed position like in FIG.
2
.
The contact arm preform
112
is then bent toward the lower recess to form the lower contact arm
64
. The preform
112
bends around the arcuate surface
50
and plastically deforms to form the arcuate portion
78
of the lower contact arm
64
. The radius of curvature of the arcuate portion
78
is substantially greater than the distance between the end walls
28
,
29
to limit the plastic deformation of the lower contact arm and maintain resiliency of the contact arm.
FIG. 10
illustrates a second embodiment interposer assembly
210
. Conventionally, assembly
210
is used for soldered connections between contact pads on both upper and lower circuit members. Interposer assembly
210
components include a flat plate
212
and a plurality of metal contacts
214
in the plate. The plate
212
is identical to the plate
12
and so will not be described further.
Each contact
214
has a central portion or body
216
similar to the contact body
60
, an upper contact arm
218
, and a lower contact arm
220
like the lower contact arm
64
. The upper contact arm
218
includes an elongate, straight inner arm portion
222
that extends at almost a right angle away from the contact body to a convex contact surface or contact nose
224
. A short extension
226
extends from the contact nose
222
to a free end located in the upper recess of the plate.
FIG. 11
illustrates the interposer assembly
210
positioned adjacent upper and lower circuit members
228
,
230
. The upper circuit member includes contact pads
232
above the contacts
214
and solder layers
234
on the pads. The lower circuit member includes contact pads
236
below the contacts
214
and solder layers
238
on the pads. The upper and lower contact pads lightly engage the contact surfaces of the contact arms and the contacts are not stressed. The distance between the contact surfaces on the lower and contact arms is greater than the thickness of the plate but less than the corresponding distance of a contact
14
.
FIG. 12
illustrates the assembly
210
when the circuit members
228
,
230
are pressed tightly against the plate
212
. The contact pads bend the upper and lower contact arms
218
,
220
into the upper and lower recesses of the plate. The resiliency of the contact arms enables each contact
214
to be compressed without a high closing force. The compressed contact arms lie flat against the contact pads. If it is necessary to replace or reseat either circuit member, the elasticity of the contact arms returns the contact surfaces away from the plate
212
for later reengagement with the contact pads.
After the circuit members
228
,
230
are pressed against the plate
212
, the upper and lower contact arms are located entirely within the upper and lower plate recesses. The contact pads
232
,
236
preferably close the openings of the contact passages in the plate. Solder connections
240
,
242
are then formed between the upper contact arms
218
and the upper contact pads
232
and between the lower contact arms
220
and the lower contact pads
236
, preferably by reflow soldering. The volume of each upper recess is sized to accommodate a solder connection entirely within the recess.
Reflow soldering can be done to both circuit members simultaneously as described above. The same solder can form the solder layers on both the upper and lower circuit members. Alternatively, the upper and lower circuit members can be soldered to the contacts in separate operations. The solder forming the first melted solder layers will have a melting temperature higher than the solder forming the later melded solder layers. This assures that the first formed solder connections do not remelt during the subsequent soldering of the other circuit member.
The end of the floor of each upper recess of the interposer plate
12
or
212
adjacent the slot, the transverse wall in each slot and the bottom surface of the plate are located on the same side of a center plane located equidistant between the top and bottom surfaces of the plate. This increases the ability of the upper recess to receive an upper contact arm without the end of the arm grounding against the recess floor. The shape of the upper contact arm and the spacing of the upper contact surface above the plate can be varied to meet design requirements without changing the geometry of the plate
12
. In other possible embodiments the shape of the upper recess can be designed to accommodate a specific upper contact arm configuration. In yet other embodiments the upper and lower recesses can be symmetrical with respect to each other about the center plane.
While we have illustrated and described preferred embodiments of our invention, it is understood that this is capable of modification, and we therefore do not wish to be limited to the precise details set forth, but desire to avail ourselves of such changes and alterations as fall within the purview of the following claims.
Claims
- 1. An interposer component adapted to receive a plurality of like metal contacts to form an interposer assembly for establishing electrical connections between pairs of upper and lower contact pads arranged in a predetermined pattern, the interposer component comprising:a plate formed from insulating material, the plate having a flat top surface, a flat bottom surface extending parallel to the top surface and a uniform thickness between the top and bottom surfaces; a plurality of single contact passages in the plate, the passages spaced apart from one another, each contact passage comprising a slot extending through the thickness of the plate for receiving a contact in the passage, an upper recess extending away from the slot and open to the top surface of the plate and a lower recess extending away from the slot and open to the bottom surface of the plate; each slot comprising opposed end walls defining opposite ends of the slot, upper and lower pairs of opposed side walls joining the end walls of the slot and a transverse wall facing the top surface of the plate between the upper and lower pairs of side walls, the upper pair of side walls extending from the top surface of the plate and defining an upper portion of the slot, the lower pair of side walls extending from the bottom surface of the plate and defining a lower portion of the slot, the upper portion of the slot defining the nominal width of the slot and the lower slot portion defining a reduced width portion of the slot; the upper recess of each passage comprising a floor facing the top surface of the plate and a pair of opposed side walls, the floor spaced inwardly from the top surface of the plate and extending from the passage slot, the side walls extending from the top surface of the plate to the floor; the lower recess of each passage comprising a floor facing the bottom surface of the plate and a pair of opposed side walls, the floor spaced inwardly from the bottom surface of the plate and extending from the passage slot, the side walls extending from the bottom surface of the plate to the floor; and the contact passages arranged in a pattern wherein the pattern of the upper recesses correspond to the pattern of the upper contact pads and the pattern of the lower recesses correspond to the pattern of the lower contact pads.
- 2. The interposer component as in claim 1 wherein the upper and lower recesses of each contact passage extend from one of the end walls of the passage slot, the floor of the upper recess overlying the floor of the lower recess whereby the contact pads of each pair of upper and lower contact pads vertically oppose one another.
- 3. The interposer component as in claim 2 wherein the floor of the lower recess of each contact passage slopes from the passage slot towards the top or bottom surface of the plate.
- 4. The interposer component as in claim 3 wherein the floor of the upper recess of each contact passage slopes from the passage slot towards the top or bottom surface of the plate.
- 5. The interposer component as in claim 4 wherein the floor of the upper recess of each contact passage slopes from the passage slot towards the top surface of the plate and the floor of the lower recess of each contact passage slopes from the passage slot towards the top surface of the plate.
- 6. The interposer component as in claim 5 wherein the floor of the upper recess of each contact passage comprises an end adjacent the slot of the contact passage; andeach of the floor ends and the bottom surface of the plate are located on one side of a plane located equidistant between the top and bottom surfaces of the plate.
- 7. The interposer component as in claim 2 wherein the upper recess of each contact passage is spaced along the passage slot from the lower recess of the passage.
- 8. The interposer component as in claim 1 wherein the floor of the lower recess of each contact passage comprises an arcuate surface adjacent the slot of the contact passage.
- 9. The interposer component as in claim 8 wherein the end walls of each slot are spaced apart a distance defining the transverse width of the slot; andthe arcuate surface of the floor of the lower recess of each contact passage has a radius of curvature greater than the transverse width of the slot of the contact passage.
- 10. The interposer component as in claim 1 wherein the upper portion of each slot extends to the lower portion of the slot whereby the upper and lower portions of the slot extend through the entire thickness of the plate.
- 11. The interposer component as in claim 10 wherein each of the upper and lower portions of each slot comprises a substantially rectangular transverse cross section.
- 12. The interposer component as in claim 11 wherein the side walls of the upper recess of each contact passage are parallel to one another and are spaced apart the nominal width of the passage slot and the side walls of the lower recess of each contact passage are parallel to one another and are spaced apart the reduced width of the passage slot.
- 13. The interposer component as in claim 1 wherein each slot is symmetrical to either side of a plane extending through the slot and perpendicular to the top and bottom surfaces of the plate.
- 14. The interposer component as in claim 1 wherein the transverse wall of each slot is to one side of a plane equidistant between the top and bottom surfaces of the plate.
- 15. The interposer component as in claim 14 wherein the transverse wall of each slot is on the same side of the plane as the bottom surface of the plate.
- 16. The interposer component as in claim 1 wherein the transverse wall of each contact passage is parallel with the top surface of the plate and adjacent the floor of the upper recess of the passage.
- 17. An interposer assembly for establishing electrical connections between spaced pairs of upper and lower contact pads, the interposer assembly comprising:a plate formed from a single piece of insulating material, the plate having a flat top surface, a flat bottom surface extending parallel to the top surface and separated from the top surface by the thickness of the plate; a plurality of single contact passages in the plate, the passages spaced apart from one another, each contact passage comprising a slot extending through the thickness of the plate, an upper recess, and a lower recess; the slot of each contact passage comprising opposed end walls defining opposite ends of the slot, upper and lower pairs of opposed side walls joining the end walls of the slot and a transverse wall facing the top surface of the plate between the upper and lower pairs of side walls, the upper pair of side walls extending from the top surface of the plate and defining an upper portion of the slot, the lower pair of side walls extending from the bottom surface of the plate and defining a lower portion of the slot, the upper portion of the slot defining the nominal width of the slot and the lower slot portion defining a reduced width portion of the slot; the upper recess of each contact passage open to the top surface of the plate and comprising a floor facing the top surface of the plate and a pair of opposed side walls, the floor spaced inwardly from the top surface of the plate and extending from an end wall of the passage slot, the side walls extending from the top surface of the plate to the floor; the lower recess of each contact passage open to the bottom surface of the plate and comprising a floor facing the bottom surface of the plate and a pair of opposed side walls, the floor spaced inwardly from the bottom surface of the plate and extending from an end wall of the slot, the side walls extending from the bottom surface of the plate to the floor; a metal contact in each contact passage, each contact comprising a body portion in the passage slot, upper and lower contact arms extending from the body portion, and a contact surface on each contact arm, the distance between the contact surfaces greater than the thickness of the plate when the contact arms are unstressed, the body portion comprising a nominal width portion in the nominal width portion of the slot, a reduced width portion in the reduced width portion of the slot and an abutment surface abutting the transverse wall of the slot to locate the contact in the contact passage, the upper contact arm extending into the upper recess and overlying the floor of the upper recess of the passage and the lower contact arm extending into the lower recess and overlying the floor of the lower recess of the passage; the contact passages arranged in a pattern wherein the upper contact pads oppose the contact surfaces on the upper contact arms and the lower contact pads oppose the contact surfaces on the lower contact arms whereby the contact pads move the contact surfaces into the upper and lower recesses when the contact pads are pressed against the interposer assembly to electrically interconnect the contact pads.
- 18. The interposer assembly as in claim 17 wherein the upper contact arm of each contact comprises an arcuate contact nose.
- 19. The interposer assembly as in claim 18 wherein the upper contact arm of each contact is elastically stressed and the contact nose of the arm is wiped along the upper contact pad when the interposer assembly is pressed against the upper contact pads.
- 20. The interposer assembly of claim 18 wherein the upper contact arm of each contact comprises a straight portion extending between the contact body and the contact nose of the upper contact arm, the straight portion engaged against an upper contact pad when the interposer assembly is pressed against the upper contact pads.
- 21. The interposer assembly of claim 20 including a solder connection in each upper recess, each solder connection interconnecting the straight portion of the upper contact arm in the recess and the upper contact pad engaged therewith.
- 22. The interposer assembly of claim 17 wherein the lower contact arm of each contact comprises a straight portion extending between the contact body and the contact nose of the lower contact arm, the straight portion engaged against a lower contact pad when the interposer assembly is pressed against the lower contact pads.
- 23. The interposer assembly as in claim 22 including a solder connection in each lower recess, each solder connection interconnecting the straight portion of the lower contact arm in the recess and the lower contact pad engaged therewith.
- 24. The interposer assembly as in claim 17 wherein the reduced width portion of each contact is closely spaced from the adjacent walls of the slot containing the contact.
- 25. The interposer assembly as in claim 17 wherein the metal contacts are formed from uniform thickness metal.
- 26. The interposer assembly as in claim 17 wherein the lower contact arm of each contact is formed after the contact body portion is inserted into the plate.
- 27. The interposer assembly as in claim 26 wherein the upper contact arm of each contact is formed before the contact body portion is inserted in the plate.
- 28. The interposer assembly as in claim 27 wherein the floor of the lower recess of each contact passage comprises an arcuate surface adjacent the slot of the contact passage; andthe lower contact arm of the contact in the contact passage comprises an arcuate portion extending from the contact body and facing the arcuate surface of the lower recess of the passage wherein the shape of the arcuate portion substantially conforms with the curvature of the arcuate surface.
- 29. The interposer assembly as in claim 28 wherein the arcuate portion of the lower contact arm of the contact in each contact passage bears against the arcuate surface of the lower recess of the passage to limit movement of the contact towards the top side of the plate.
US Referenced Citations (32)