Laminate electrical interconnect system

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6712648
  • Patent Number
    6,712,648
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, July 24, 2002
    21 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 30, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
An electrical connector having a laminate structure and multiple parallel grooves is described. The laminate structure is electrically conductive and is coated with an electrically non-conductive material. Each groove has a signal carrying path electrically insulated from the electrically conductive portion of the laminate structure, which is advantageously surrounded by the laminate structure, thereby forming a type of Faraday cage around the signal carrying path and creating a completely shielded electrical path.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates generally to electrical connectors, and more particularly, to a composite layered interconnect system. Even more particularly, the present invention relates to a high density electrical interconnect system having multiple shielded electrical paths.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Backplane systems are comprised of a complex printed circuit board which is referred to as a backplane or motherboard, and several smaller printed circuit boards which are referred to as daughtercards which plug into the backplane. Each of the daughtercards includes one or more chips which are referred to as the driver/receiver, The driver/receiver sends and receives signals from the drivers/receivers on other daughtercards. A signal path is formed between the driver/receiver on a first daughtercard and the driver/receiver on the second daughtercard. The signal path includes an electrical connector that connects the first daughtercard to the backplane, a second electrical connector that connects the second daughtercard to the backplane and the second daughtercard having the driver/receiver that receives the carriage signals. Various drivers/receivers being used today can transmit signals to data rates between 5-10 Gb/second and greater. The limiting factor (data transfer rate) in the signal path are the electrical connectors which connect each daughtercard to the backplane. A need exists in the art for a high speed electrical connector capable of handling the required high speed transfer data.




Further, the receivers are capable of discriminating signals having only 5% of the original signal strength sent by the driver. Reduction in signal strength increases the importance of minimizing cross-talk between signal paths to avoid signal degradation or errors being introduced into digital data streams. With high speed, high density electrical connectors, it is even more important to minimize cross-talk. Most high density electrical connectors use stamped copper components for carrying electrical signals. These copper components are usually unshielded and thus there is cross-talk between signal carrying paths.




Thus, need exists in the art for a high speed electrical connector capable of handling high speed signals that reduces cross-talk between signal paths.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector in which separate signal paths are shielded from each other.




Another object of the present invention is to provide a low cost, high density electrical interconnect system which is simple to manufacture.




Yet another object of the present invention is to provide an electrical interconnect system having a dense array of signal carrying contacts and a shielded signal carrying path.




These and other objects of the present invention are achieved by an electrical connector including a plurality of layers wherein each layer has a first side and a second side. Each layer has longitudinal grooves in the first side and the second side. The longitudinal grooves are electrically conductive and each of the plurality of layers is adjacent to at least one other layer. A first layer has a first side not adjacent to another layer. A last layer has a second side not adjacent to another layer. A first side of each other layer is adjacent to a second side of another layer. A plurality of contacts is each engaged with a respective groove.




The foregoing and other objects of the present invention are achieved by an electrical connector including a first layer and a last layer and a plurality of intermediate layers. Each layer has a first surface and a second surface and each layer has a plurality of conductive traces on at least one of said first surface and the second surface. A plurality of contacts is each engaged with a respective groove.




The present invention is directed to an electrical connector having a laminate structure. The laminate structure has multiple parallel grooves. The laminate structure is electrically conductive and is coated with an electrically non-conductive material. Each groove has a signal carrying path which is advantageously surrounded by the laminate structure, thereby forming a type of Faraday cage around the signal carrying path and creating a completely shielded electrical path.











Still other objects and advantages of the present invention will become readily apparent to those killed in the art from the following detailed description, wherein the preferred embodiments of the invention are shown and described, simply by way of illustration of the best mode contemplated of carrying out the invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modifications in various obvious respects, all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and description thereof are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not as restrictive.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The present invention is illustrated by way of example, and not by limitation, in the figure of the accompanying drawings, wherein elements having the same reference numeral designation represent like elements throughout and wherein:





FIG. 1

is an exploded view of a first embodiment of the present invention and a laminated electrical interconnect system according to the principles of the present invention;





FIG. 2

is a perspective view of the electrical interconnect system of

FIG. 1

fully assembled;





FIG. 3

is a plan view of a lance type electrical contact used with the electrical interconnect system;





FIG. 4

is a cross-sectional view of the lance-type electrical contact engaged with the laminate structure;





FIG. 5

is a perspective view of a second embodiment of the present invention in a horizontal configuration;





FIG. 6

is a perspective view of a laminate used in the

FIG. 5

electrical connectors;





FIG. 7

is a ground spring used in the

FIG. 5

electrical connector;





FIG. 8

is another perspective view of a layer of the second embodiment of

FIG. 5

with electrical contacts engaged with the laminate;





FIG. 9

is a perspective view of a layer of the second embodiment of

FIG. 5

with an electrical contact engaged with a compressible conductive pad in a groove in the laminate; and





FIG. 10

is a perspective view of two layers of the second embodiment of

FIG. 5

with a micro-strip positioned between the layers.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




Refer first to

FIG. 1

, which is an exploded view of a horizontal first embodiment of an electrical connector according to the principles of the present invention. Electrical connector


20


includes a first layer


22


, a second layer


24


, a third layer


26


, and a fourth layer


28


which together form a laminate structure


29


. It is envisioned that the electrical connector would include many more layers than are shown in FIG.


1


and it is possible to have approximately 3000 signal lines in each electrical connector. Most preferably, the first embodiment of the electrical connector would have 15 layers each having 200 grooves for a total of 3000 signal paths. Each signal path has opposed contacts at opposite ends of the signal path.




Each of the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


has an inner surface


42


,


44


,


46


and


48


respectively. Each layer


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


has an outer surface


52


,


54


,


56


, and


58


, respectively. Each of the layers


42


,


44


,


46


and


48


is preferably made from an electrically conductive material such as aluminum, brass or copper. Each of the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


can either be molded or stamped from a metallic material and suitably insulated by plating with an appropriate dielectric material. Alternatively, each of the layers can be molded from a non-conductive material and suitably plated for shielding and then insulated with the appropriate dielectric material. The first layer


22


has a front edge


62


and an opposite back edge


72


, both transverse to the longitudinal direction. The second layer


24


has a front edge


64


and a back edge


74


transverse to the longitudinal direction. The third layer


26


has a front edge


66


and a back edge


76


. The fourth layer


28


has a front edge


68


and a back edge


78


.




The first layer has a left side edge


73


and a right side edge


75


. The second layer has a left side edge


83


and a right side edge


85


. The third layer has a left side edge


87


and a right side edge


89


. The fourth layer has a left side edge


91


and a right side edge


93


. The first layer


22


has a smaller radius of curvature and each succeeding layer


24


,


26


and


28


has a slightly larger radius of curvature such that the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


are stackable on one another. Each layer


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


is aligned with the other layers such that right side edges


75


,


85


,


89


,


93


are aligned and the left side edges


73


,


83


,


87


,


91


are aligned.




Each of the four layers


72


-


78


is coated with an electrically non-conductive dielectric material such as anodize Teflon™, or ceramic. Layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


can be bonded together with a non-conductive epoxy placed in between layers or mechanically. It is important that the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


are not electrically in contact with one another except that each of the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


is connected to ground. Each of the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


has an exposed portion


82


-


88


, for example, on the right side edges


75


,


85


,


89


,


93


thereof, respectively, which are connected to ground as discussed below.




As depicted in

FIG. 1

, layer


22


has three longitudinally inwardly extending lower grooves


102


(not shown),


104


and


106


which extend from the front edge


62


to the back edge


72


. Although the grooves are depicted as semi-circular any shape can be used for ease of manufacture. The layer


22


also has three inwardly upper grooves


108


,


110


,


112


. As depicted in

FIG. 1

, grooves


108


,


110


and


112


each have a conductive trace


122


,


124


,


126


, respectively, in a lower part of the groove. The conductive traces are placed in the grooves after the layers have been insulated and in this manner each of the traces is electrically separate from adjacent traces. For example, with respect to groove


108


a gap


132


exists between the conductive trace


122


and surface


52


so that there is no possibility of electrical contact between layer


22


and layer


24


. As depicted in

FIG. 1

, the grooves


102


,


104


,


106


in the lower surface


42


can have conductive traces and a junction can be formed between a respective trace and an inserted electrical contact.




The layer


24


has lower longitudinal grooves


142


,


144


and


146


. The remaining grooves or layers


24


,


26


, and


28


are not discussed for clarity. The grooves


142


,


144


and


146


can either have conductive traces or not depending on the application.




As depicted in

FIG. 1

, groove


142


can also have a conductive trace placed therein, for example, and the same signal can be carried by conductive traces


122


and


142


forming a single signal path through the conductor. Alternatively, each of the conductive traces


122


,


142


can carry different signals permitting the use of differential-pairs of lines on each side of the conductive contact.




Although not shown in

FIG. 1

, additional grooves can be added to each of the layers for alignment between adjacent layers.




As depicted in

FIG. 1

, alignment guides


30


and


32


have a rectangular shape and each has a plurality of holes to align with respective holes at opposite ends of the laminate structure


29


. For example, grooves


108


and


142


form roughly a circle and together provide an engagement area for a pin type contact


36


such as that disclosed in a patent application entitled “COMPLIANT SECTION FOR AN ELECTRICAL CONTACT”, Ser. No. 09/965,869, filed on Oct. 1, 2001, assigned to the instant assignee, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this specification in its entirety.




Advantageously, the laminate structure


29


completely surrounds each of the signal carrying traces forming a Faraday cage and preventing cross-talk between adjacent traces and eliminating noise. A Faraday cage is an electrostatic screen. The electrostatic screen is a shield against electric flux consisting of a number of straight, narrowly separated rods or wires joined at only one end. The plurality of layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


from a type of Faraday cage for each signal contact by directing all magnetic fields created when a current travels through a wire directly to the underlying conductive layer which is then grounded.




The alignment guides are made from an electrically non-conductive material. Alignment guide


30


includes a row of holes


110


,


112


,


114


which are aligned with grooves


108


,


142


;


110


,


144


; and


112


,


146


, respectively. Contacts


36


are inserted into respective holes in alignment guide


30


and contacts


38


are inserted into alignment guide


32


. The contacts


36


,


38


serve to retain the alignment guides


30


,


32


to the laminate structure


29


.




The contacts


36


,


38


are held into the backplane and daughtercard using a compliant section such as the eye of a needle


37


,


39


, respectively.




The preferred contact is a lance style type contact


36


,


38


as depicted in FIG.


1


. The lance style contact


36


has a lance portion


124


, a hand guard portion


126


and a compliant section


37


. Lance portion


124


of the contact


36


engages and mates with the traces forming a junction between the traces and the contact


36


. For example, trace


122


is found in the groove


108


and is engaged with a contact


36


. The geometry of the lance portion


124


is similar to the compliant section


37


except that the eye of the lance is slightly smaller to allow for smaller forces and one of the beams is not fixed on one end to almost simulate a thumb on a hand. A hand guard portion


126


is located between the lance portion


124


and the compliant section


37


,


39


and engages with an outer surface


130


of the alignment guide


30


. This connector is not limited to the lance contact.




A conductive wire/wire pad can be placed in parallel with each groove in the laminate and electrically connected to that laminate to form a more direct path to ground. For example, a very thin spun wire or flat conductive wire/strip that makes reliable contact, like a gasket, with parallel laminates may be placed between all or some data/signal carrying traces, but must ultimately be connected to ground.




The alignment guide


30


is retained as part of the connector by the plurality of contacts


36


. The alignment guide


32


is retained to the plurality of layers by a plurality of contacts


38


. A ground


34


has a hollow rectangular configuration and an inner surface of the ground


34


is in contact with the exposed surfaces


82


,


84


,


86


and


88


of the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


, respectively. The inner surface of ground


34


presses, i.e., is formed to mechanically flex against the exposed surfaces


82


,


84


,


86


and


88


of layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


.




Refer now to

FIG. 3

where the lance type contact


36


is shown in greater detail. The lance section


124


includes a thumb portion


170


and a springy hand portion


172


. The hand guard section


36


includes a first section


180


and a stepped section


182


. Note that stepped section


182


is wider than first section


180


such that the contact can be keyed into holes


110


,


112


and


114


.




Refer now to

FIG. 4

illustrating a cross-sectional view of the electrical connector with a contact inserted through the alignment guide


30


into the laminate structure


29


. The thumb portion


170


is in contact with groove


144


and the hand portion


172


is in contact with the groove


110


. As depicted in

FIG. 4

, the hand portion


172


deflects in a direction away from groove


110


. Also note that the step portion


182


engages with the alignment guide


30


. The alignment guide


30


geometry is such that the contacts are oriented to mate with the trace in the groove. If only one conductive trace is used then it is preferable to have the hand portion


172


in contact with the one conductive trace.




As depicted in

FIG. 5

, a second embodiment of the present invention is illustrated. The advantage to the second embodiment depicted in

FIGS. 5-8

is that each of the laminates can be identical. In contrast, in the first embodiment, each of the layers


22


,


24


,


26


, and


28


is not identical and would have to be stamped or molded in a different tool thus increasing cost and complexity. Each of the laminates


500


,


502


,


504


, etc. is stacked one against another. Each laminate


500


,


502


,


504


can be made from either an electrically conductive material such as aluminum, copper or brass and then coated with an electrically non-conductive material or can be made from an electrically non-conductive material and then plated with an electrically conductive material.





FIG. 8

is a perspective view of a single laminate


500


according to the second embodiment described above. Multiple contacts are shown inserted into grooves on surface


600


. In assembled form, two or more laminates are stacked side-by-side, as depicted in

FIG. 5

, and the grooves line up with the traces on surface


610


. Contacts inserted in the grooves on surface


600


, as depicted in

FIG. 8

, are in contact with the traces on surface


610


of the neighboring laminate (not shown). Each laminate has a plurality of circular segmented grooves


602


,


604


,


606


as depicted in FIG.


6


. Grooves


602


,


604


,


606


extend inwardly from a surface


600


. At the bottom of each of these grooves


602


,


604


,


606


is an electrically conductive trace. The conductive traces or signal lines can be precision stamped or printed on a PC board (single or double sided micro-strip, strip line or the like) or produced in shielded or unshielded flexible circuits. Referring back to

FIG. 5

, on the back surface


610


, can be placed a plurality of conductive traces


520


,


522


,


524


as depicted in FIG.


5


. These conductive traces


520


,


522


,


524


, etc. can be used to provide a second signal path opposite a particular groove.




Laminate


500


has a through hole


620


in one comer thereof which can be used as an alignment hole. Another through hole


622


is an opposite corner thereof to align the stack of laminates


500


,


502


,


504


. A conductive pin can be inserted through each holes


620


,


622


, through the entire length connector to stiffen up the connector assembly and to serve as a ground for grounding all the laminates together. Laminate


500


also has an exposed comer portion with a pair of holes


640


,


642


connected by surfaces


644


,


646


,


648


, respectively. Surfaces


644


,


646


,


648


are slightly within the periphery of laminate


500


. A ground spring depicted in

FIG. 7

is used to ground all the laminates together.




The conductive signals paths can be placed in the grooves


602


,


604


,


606


in each laminate as single sided or double sided, printed on a micro-strip, strip line or equivalent. Wires can also be placed into the grooves. The conductive signal paths can also be configured as a differential pair of signal contacts by having one signal path in groove


602


,


604


,


606


and a different signal path on traces


520


,


522


,


524


.




Instead of a cantilever style contact depicted in

FIG. 1

, a compressible conductive pad, e.g., a Fuzz Button™, can be placed into the end of each groove making electrical contact with a trace and with the backplane or daughtercard.





FIG. 9

is a perspective view of a compressible conductive pad


900


in a groove


902


in a laminate


904


and a pin contact


906


inserted into another groove. Pin contact


906


differs from lance-style contact


36


(

FIG. 3

) by having an elongated cylindrical portion


910


in place of lance section


124


. In an alternate embodiment, the cylindrical portion


910


may be a chamfered cylindrical piece for sliding beside the compressible pad


900


. Insertion of contact


906


into a groove


908


containing a compressible conductive pad (not shown) creates a large contact area between the contact


906


and the trace (not shown) in the groove


908


.





FIG. 10

is a perspective view of two adjacent layers


920


,


922


in a laminate


500


as described above, wherein a micro-strip


924


is positioned between the adjacent layers


920


,


922


. An additional micro-strip (not shown) would be positioned on the other side of layer


922


oppose micro-strip


924


and layer


920


. A contact


906


is inserted in a groove


926


of one of the layers


922


for contacting the additional micro-strip (not shown). Contact


906


may be either a lance-style contact, e.g., contact


36


of

FIG. 3

, or a contact


906


of

FIG. 9

contacting a compressible pad (not shown) and thereby being in conductive contact with a micro-strip (not shown).




It will be readily seen by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention fulfills all of the objects set forth above. After reading the foregoing specification, one of ordinary skill will be able to affect various changes, substitutions of equivalents and various other aspects of the invention as broadly disclosed herein. It is therefore intended that the protection granted hereon be limited only by the definition contained in the appended claims and equivalents thereof.



Claims
  • 1. An electrical connector, comprising:a plurality of layers each having a first side and a second side, each of said plurality of layers having longitudinal grooves in at least one of said first side and said second side, each of said longitudinal grooves being electrically conductive, each of said plurality of layers being adjacent at least one other layer with a first layer having a first side not adjacent to another layer and a last layer having a second side not adjacent to another layer and with a first side of each other layer being adjacent to a second side of another layer each of said longitudinal grooves being electrically insulated from all other longitudinal grooves; and a plurality of contacts each electrically engaged with a respective groove; wherein each of said plurality of layers is made of an electrically conductive material and has an electrically non-conductive coating thereon, said longitudinal grooves being electrically insulated from said conductive material by said non-conductive coating.
  • 2. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein each of said plurality of layers is identical.
  • 3. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein said electrical connector is a right angle connector.
  • 4. The electrical connector of claim 1, further comprising a first alignment guide at one end of said plurality of layers and a second alignment guide at an opposite end of said plurality of layers, each of said alignment guides having a plurality of through holes through which a corresponding one of said plurality of contacts extends.
  • 5. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein each of said plurality of layers is electrically connected to ground.
  • 6. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein each of said longitudinal grooves extends inwardly from said first side or said second side.
  • 7. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein each of said grooves has one of a semi-circular cross-section and a rectangular cross-section.
  • 8. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein each of said plurality of layer has an exposed portion which is electrically connected to ground.
  • 9. The electrical connector of claim 1, wherein said plurality of layers are bonded together with a non-conductive epoxy.
  • 10. An electrical connector comprising:a first layer and a last layer and a plurality of intermediate layers, each layer having a first surface and a second surface with each layer having a plurality of conductive traces on at least one of said first surface and said second surface, each conductive trace being electrically insulated from all other traces; and a plurality of contacts each electrically engaged with a respective trace; wherein each of said layers is made of an electrically conductive material and has an electrically non-conductive coating thereon, said traces being electrically insulated from said conductive material by said non-conductive coating.
  • 11. The electrical connector of claim 10, wherein said electrical connector is a right angle connector.
  • 12. The electrical connector of claim 10, wherein each of said layers is electrically connected to ground.
  • 13. The electrical connector of claim 10, wherein said first layer has a smaller radius and each succeeding layer has a larger radius.
  • 14. An electrical connector, comprising:a first plurality of layers each having a first side and a second side with a first side of intermediate layers being adjacent a second side of an adjacent layer, each of said plurality of layers having at least one electrically conductive longitudinal groove each groove being electrically insulated from all other grooves; and a plurality of contacts each electrically engaged with a respective groove; wherein each of said plurality of layers is made of an electrically conductive material and has an electrically non-conductive coating thereon, said grooves being electrically insulated from said conductive material by said non-conductive coating.
  • 15. The electrical connector of claim 14, wherein said electrical connector is a right angle connector.
  • 16. The electrical connector of claim 14, wherein each of said plurality of layers is electrically connected to ground.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
4670339 Frey Jun 1987 A
6062913 Puerner May 2000 A
6491545 Spiegel et al. Dec 2002 B1
6565392 Padro May 2003 B2