Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for making a magnetics assembly, and particularly to a magnetics assembly having a transformer made of litz wire winding.
Description of Related Art
US 2011/0167869, published on Jul. 14, 2011, discloses a modular jack comprising an insulating housing and a plurality of terminals operatively connected to a magnetics assembly and configured to engage contacts of a mating plug. The magnetics assembly comprises a printed circuit board (PCB), a number of conductive pins connected to the PCB, and a transformer. The transformer has a toroidal core having an opening therein, four twisted wires winding around the toroidal core through the opening and having ends respectively connected to the conductive pins. The ends of the four wires are connected to form a primary and a secondary coils of the transformer, each of the primary and secondary coils having a central tap and carrying circuit in single wire.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,785,135, issued to Wu on Aug. 31, 2010, discloses an electrical connector has a housing defining an opening therein, a magnetic module mounted to the housing. The magnetic module includes a printed circuit board, a first set of terminals mounted to a front face of the printed circuit board and received in the opening, a second set of terminals mounted to a rear side of the printed circuit board, a toroidal coil pair mounted to the printed circuit board and having a first toroidal body, and a second toroidal body electrically connected with each other by a circuit provided on the printed circuit board.
Litz wire consists of multiple strands insulated electrically from each other. Ordinarily the strands are twisted or woven. Litz wire made out of eight (8) thinner isolated copper wires are typical.
The present invention provides a method for making a magnetics assembly, the method comprising the following steps: providing first to eighth magnetic wires; twisting the first to eighth magnetic wires to form a bundle of wires having a first end and an opposite second end; providing a magnetic core shaped as a toroidal shaft extending along a circle locus around a central axis, the toroidal shaft defining a central opening, a top and a bottom faces perpendicular to the central axis; winding the bundle of magnetic wires around the magnetic core in one direction with the first end extending out from the central opening through the top face of the magnetic core and the second end extending out from the central opening through the bottom face of the magnetic core; sorting the first end and the second end of the bundle of wires to form individual first ends and individual second ends of the first to eighth wires; picking out the second ends of the first wire and the second wire, and the first ends of the third wire and the fourth wire to form a centre tap of a primary coil of a transformer, the first ends of the first wire and the second wire to form an input of the primary coil, and the second ends of the third wire and the fourth wire to form an output of the primary coil; and picking out the second ends of the fifth wire and the sixth wire, and the first ends of the seventh wire and the eighth wire to form a centre tap of a secondary coil of the transformer, the first ends of the fifth wire and the sixth wire to form an input of the secondary coil, and the second ends of the seventh wire and the eighth wire to form an output of the secondary coil.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Reference will now be made to the drawing figures to describe the present invention in detail.
Referring to
The bundle of wires 3 has a central portion with the first to eighth wires twisted together, a first end and an opposite second end. The central portion winds around the magnetic core 2 in one direction through the central opening 22 and around the toroidal shaft some times. The first end of the bundle of wires 3 extends out from central opening 22 through the top face and each wire has a corresponding first end therein. The second end of the bundle of wires 3 extends out from the central opening 22 of the magnetic core 2 through the bottom face, and each wire has a corresponding second end therein. The second ends of the first wire and the second wire, and the first ends of the third wire and the fourth wire are sorted out and twisted to form a central tap 36. The first ends of the first wire and the second wire are sorted out and twisted to form an input 33 of a primary coil of the transformer 1. The second ends of the third wire and the fourth wire are sorted out and twisted to form an output 34 of the primary coil of the transformer 1. The second ends of the fifth wire and the sixth wire, and the first ends of the seventh wire and the eighth wire are sorted out twisted to form a central tap 35. The first ends of the fifth wire and the sixth wire are sorted out and twisted to form an input 31 of a secondary coil of the transformer 1. The second ends of the seventh wire and the eighth wire are sorted out and twisted to form an output 32 of the secondary coil of the transformer 1.
Since the first end of the bundle of wires 3 extends from the top face of the magnetic core 2 and the second end of the bundle of wires 3 extends from the bottom face of the magnetic core 2, it is quite clear that to sort out the red wire ends (first ends of the first and second wires) extending from the top face of the magnetic core 2 to form the input of primary coil, sort out the red wire ends extending from the bottom face of the magnetic core 2 and the blue wire ends extending from the top face of the magnetic core 2 to form the central tap of the primary coil, and sort out the blue wire ends extending from the bottom face of the magnetic core 2 to form the output of the primary coil. It is the same way to sort out the input, the output and the central tap of the secondary coil. In order to more accurately position a length of the coils winding around the core 2, the first end and the second end of the bundle of wires 3 could be first intercrossed, and then sorted out to form the inputs 31, 33, the outputs 32, 34 and the central taps 35, 36. However, this will make it quite troublesome to distinguish which ends of the wires should be the central taps 35, 36 or the inputs 31, 32 or the outputs 33, 34.
The PCB 200 has a plurality of conductive pads 41-43, 51-53 arrayed in first row 4 and a second row 5. The input 33, the output 34 and the central tap 36 of the primary coil are soldered onto corresponding conductive pads 51, 52, 53 in the second row 5. The input 31, the output 32 and the central tap 35 of the secondary coil being soldered onto corresponding conductive pads 41, 42, 43 in the first row 4. It is clearly shown in
Through the forementioned connection between the inputs 31, 33, outputs 32, 34, and central taps 35, 36 of the primary coil and the secondary coil, the transformer 1 has two duplicated litz wires to carry each circuit of the primary coil or the secondary coil (clearly shown in
Referring to
The contact module 44 further comprise a center frame 48 supporting the two magnetic assemblies 100 and the mating contacts 442, 444. The frame 48 defines two cavities 480, 482 oppositely opened to receive the transformers 1 disposed on inner sides of the two PCBs 200.
A method for making the magnetics assembly 100 comprises the following steps:
The disclosure is illustrative only, changes may be made in detail, especially in matter of shape, size, and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention.
The present application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/523,076, filed Jun. 14, 2012.
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4717889 | Engelmann | Jan 1988 | A |
5726611 | Takagi et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
7785135 | Wu | Aug 2010 | B2 |
20070040645 | Sedio et al. | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20070259573 | Machado | Nov 2007 | A1 |
20110167869 | Geers | Jul 2011 | A1 |
20120309233 | O'Malley | Dec 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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M390532 | Oct 2010 | TW |
M405042 | Jun 2011 | TW |
WO2005048451 | May 2005 | WO |
Entry |
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C. R. Sullivan, Optimal Choice for Number of Strands in a Litz-Wire Transformer Winding, From IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, vol. 14, No. 2, pp. 283-291, Mar. 1999. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150040381 A1 | Feb 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13523076 | Jun 2012 | US |
Child | 14523937 | US |