1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a mechanism to dissipate heat from a pluggable optical transceiver, in particular, the invention relates to a structure of a heat sink provided in a cage to receive the pluggable optical transceiver.
2. Related Prior Art
An optical transceiver, which transmits and receives optical signals through an optical connector engaged therewith by optically active devices of a light-emitting device and a light-receiving device each made of semiconductor materials, generally includes a body that installs a plurality of electronic components, electronic circuits and circuit boards; and an optical receptacle that receives the optical connector. One type of optical transceivers is called as a hot-pluggable optical transceiver, in which the transceiver is inserted into or extracted from a cage provided on a host board to engage an electrical plug of the transceiver with an optical connector prepared in the deep end of the cage without turning off the power of the host system.
On the top of the cage 2 is provided with a heat sink 6 to dissipate heat from the transceiver 3. The clip 7 bounds the heat sink with the cage 2. The roughness of the top surface of the transceiver 3 and that of the bottom surface of the heat sink 6, that is, the surfaces to be adhered to each other, affects the heat-dissipating efficiency.
Recent transmission speed in the optical communication system exceeds 10 Gbps and reaches 100 Gbps, which inevitably accompanies with the larger power consumption in the electronic and optical devices. An effective heat-dissipating mechanism is always required. It is inevitable to obtain the efficient heat conduction between solids, such as the contact between the housing of the transceiver and the heat sink of the cage, to widen a contact area and to make the surfaces to be contacted smooth as possible. However, the process to obtain such smooth surfaces is cost-ineffective and the outer dimensions of the transceiver do not permit the widened area.
Another method to secure the effective thermal contact between metals has been known, in which a viscous paste or a resin sheet with less hardness is put between the surfaces. Although the resin is inherently inferior in the thermal conductivity, it is applicable as a thermo-conducting sheet by merging metals or ceramics with good thermal conductivity in a shape of the powder and by thinning the thickness thereof as possible. Such a member, hereafter denoted as a thermo-conducting sheet, is applicable as a gap-filler put between two members rigidly fixed with respect to each other by removing air gaps and equivalently expands the contact area; accordingly, it secures the efficient heat transmission between members. However, it is insufficient for the heat transmission only to make it, the thermo-conducting sheet, in contact to each other; the control of an adequate pressure applied to the members and the thermal conductivity of the thermo-conducting sheet are necessary.
In a conventional pluggable optical transceiver, the heat-dissipation has been performed only by the physical contact between the housing of the transceiver and the heat sink without any thermo-conducting sheet. In another case where the heat generation in the transceiver is comparably less, the housing of the transceiver itself may perform the heat-dissipating function without coming in contact with the heat sink. However, recent pluggable optical transceivers have generated heat more and more as the transmission speed and the transmission distance increases, which inevitably requests the heat sink and the effective heat-dissipating path from the transceiver to the heat sink.
The pluggable optical transceiver, as its name indicates, is inserted into or extracted from the cage. Thus, the arrangement for the thermal contact between the housing of the transceiver and the heat sink is necessary not to obstruct the insertion or extraction of the transceiver. When the transceiver is inserted into the cage, the heat sink provided in the cage must be untouched to the housing until the transceiver is set in the regular position to secure the smooth insertion. The present invention is to provide such a mechanism between the housing of the transceiver and the heat sink.
One aspect of the present invention relates to a mechanism to dissipate heat from a pluggable optical transceiver set in a cage to a heat sink assembled with the cage through a thermo-conducting sheet put between the optical transceiver and the heat sink. The mechanism includes at lest a projection in a rear end of the optical transceiver, at least a rail with a pocket provided in the heat sink, and a mechanism provided in the cage and the heat sink to cause the downward force to the heat sink. In the present mechanism, the projection first lifts the heat sink upward withstanding the downward force by running on the rail when the transceiver is inserted into the cage. The projection finally falls within the pocket to adhere to thermo-conducting sheet to the optical transceiver when the optical transceiver is set in a final position within the cage.
The mechanism of the invention enables the thermo-conducting sheet to be apart from the surface of the transceiver to be come in contact with the heat sink until the optical transceiver is set in the final position, which may escape the thermo-conducting sheet from scraping with the transceiver and being peeled off. Moreover, the downward force caused in the heat sink becomes active at the final position of the transceiver; the effective heat-dissipating path may be secured from the optical transceiver to the heat sink.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to a pluggable optical transceiver to be set in a cage providing a heat sink to dissipate heat from the optical transceiver through a thermo-conducting sheet. The heat sink is applied with a downward force from the cage when the cage is free from the transceiver and provides a first rail with a first pocket and a second rail with a second pocket. The optical transceiver of the invention includes a first projection in a surface to come in contact with the thermo-conducting sheet and a second projection in the surface. The second projection is not over lapped with the first projection in a direction along which the optical transceiver is inserted into the cage. The first projection first runs on the first rail of the heat sink to lift the heat sink upward when the transceiver is inserted into the cage. The first projection is set within the first pocket and the second projection is set within the second pocket such that the heat sink is adhered to the surface of the transceiver with putting the thermo-conducting sheet therebetween when the optical transceiver is set in a regular position within the cage.
Third aspect of the present invention relates to a cage assembly for a pluggable optical transceiver. The cage assembly includes a cage and a heat sink. The cage provides a window in a top thereof and an elastic member to causing a downward force to the heat sink. The heat sink provided with a thermo-conducting sheet and exposes from the window of the cage. The heat sink is movable within the window in vertical, while, substantially immovable in horizontal. The heat sink also provides a rail with a pocket in a surface where the thermo-conducting sheet is adhered thereto. In the present cage assembly, the rail is run on with a projection provided in the optical transceiver to lift the heat sink upward withstanding the downward force when the optical transceiver is inserted into the cage. The pocket receives the projection to adhere the thermo-conducting sheet to the optical transceiver when the transceiver is set in the regular position within the cage.
Next, preferred embodiments according to the present invention will be described in detail as referring to drawings.
The fundamental structure of the present heat-dissipating mechanism is similar to those appeared in the conventional mechanism such as those shown in
The cage 12 has the box shape with the aperture 12c in the top 12b thereof to exposes the heat sink 15. The heat sink 15 assembled with the cage 12 such that the heat sink 15 is movable in up and down. The cross section of the side rib 16 controls the up and down motion of the heat sink 15 cooperating with tabs 17 formed in the side 12d of the cage 12.
The optical transceiver 13 has the metal housing 14. When the transceiver 13 is set within the cage 12, the top 14a of the housing 14 comes in thermally contact with the heat sink 15.
Specifically, the thermo-conducting sheet 18 may be made of resin such as silicone rubber, or may be made of hybridized material of organic and inorganic material containing, as a thermal conductive filler, metal powder of copper, aluminum, silver or stainless steel; or minute particles of oxide metal such as of aluminum oxide, titanium oxide or silicon oxide, nitride metal such as boron nitride, aluminum nitride, or chromium nitride; or other carbonized metal. The thickness of the thermo-conducting sheet 18 is preferably from 0.3 to 1.0 mm. Such a thermo-conducting sheet is easily available in the market.
The optical transceiver 13, as already described, is a type of the pluggable transceiver able to be inserted into and extracted from the cage 12. The transceiver 13 is necessary not to graze or not to peel the thermo-conducting sheet 18 by the insertion or the extraction. The transceiver 14 according to the present invention provides the projection 19 in both sides of the top 14a of the housing 14, while, the heat sink 15 provides the rail 20 in both sides of the bottom 15a thereof that receives the projection 19. Both the projection 19 and the rail 20 are formed in respective surfaces so as to escape the thermo-conducting sheet 18.
When the transceiver 13 is inserted into the cage, the projection 19 lifts up the heat sink 15, resisting the downward force for the heat sink 15 applied by the elastic tab 16, by abutting against the bottom 15a of the heat sink 15 in the insertion of the transceiver 13. That is, the thermo-conducting sheet 18 may be apart from the top 14a of the housing 14 without being grazed until the transceiver 13 is set in the final position in the cage 12.
At the final portion of the transceiver 13 in the cage 12, the rail 20 receives the projection 19, at which the heat sink 12 is pressed downward by the elastic force due to the side tab 17 to a position denoted by the chain line in
While the rail 20 in both sides of the heat sink 15 provides two tracks, 20a and 20b, each traced by the projection, 19a or 19b, in the housing 14. Here, only a center portion of the bottom 15a of the heat sink 15 is adhered with the thermo-conducting sheet 18, and both side walls of the transceiver 13 provides the side rib 16. The first rail 20a, namely the inner rail, receives the first projection 19a, namely the rear projection, of the housing 14, while, the second rail 20b, namely the outer rail, set outside to the first rail 20a receives the second projection 19b, namely the front projection. In the rear end of the first rail 20a is formed with the pocket 20d where the first projection 19a is set therein, while, the rear end of the second rail 20b provides the second pocket 20e where the second projection 19b is set therein. The ends of respective rails, 20a and 20b, are formed in slope 20c to facilitate the slide of the projection, 19a or 19b, thereon.
At the initial position of the transceiver 13 in the cage 12 shown in
Subsequent to the initial position shown in
At the final position of the transceiver 13 in the cage, the second projection 19b also falls into the second pocket 20e, which the thermo-conducting sheet 18 between the housing 14 and the heat sink 15 is pressed by the downward force of the heat sink 15 by the elastic tab 17. When the transceiver 13 is extracted from the cage 12, the mechanism described above may also operate to the heat sink 15.
That is, the second projection 19b first rides on the second rail to lift the front end of the heat sink 15 upward withstanding the downward force due to the tab 17 as shown in
Thus, according to the embodiment described above, the transceiver 14 may be inserted into or extracted from the cage 12 without touching the top 14a of the housing 14 to the thermo-conducting sheet until the transceiver 13 is set in the final portion where the plug 24 mates with the connector 22. The thermo-conducting sheet may be escaped from the grazing or peeling by the transceiver 13. Similarly, when the transceiver 13 is extracted from the cage 12, the mechanism according to the embodiment above firstly separates the thermo-conducting sheet 18 from the housing 14, and secondly moves the transceiver 12 from the cage 13.
As already explained, the heat sink 15 is assembled with the cage 12 such that the top of the heat sink with a plurality of fins exposes from the aperture 12c of the cage so as to be slightly movable in vertical and substantially immovable in horizontal. The front and rear edges of the aperture 12c are bent downward and a tip of the bent portion extends inside of the aperture 12c to form a tip tab 12e. While, the bottom corners of the front end rear ends of the heat sink 15 provide a step hooked on the tip tab 12e. When the cage 12 is free from the transceiver 15, the heat sink 15 receives the downward force by the tab 17 in the side of the cage; this downward force may be compensated by this tip tab 12e. When the cage 12 receives the transceiver 15, the heat sink 15 is lift upward by the projections, 19a and 19b, of the top 14a of the housing 14 to a position shown with the broken lines in
While this invention has been described with reference to illustrative embodiments, this description is not intended to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications and combinations of the illustrative embodiments, as well as other embodiments of the invention, will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to the description. It is therefore intended that the appended claims encompass any such modifications or embodiments.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2007-329668 | Dec 2007 | JP | national |
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 60/996,924, filed Dec. 11, 2007, and claims priority from Japanese application, JP2007-329668, filed on Dec. 21, 2007, which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60996924 | Dec 2007 | US |