1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an optical transceiver, in particular, the invention relates to a pluggable optical transceiver inserted into or extracted from a cage provided in a host system.
2. Related Background Art
One type of a pluggable optical transceiver has been known as the small form factor pluggable (SFP) transceiver whose outer dimensions and electrical interfaces with the host system are decided in one of multi-source agreements. The SFP transceiver has a longitudinal housing and a shield finger surrounding the housing and to be in contact with an inner surface of the cage when the pluggable optical transceiver is set within the cage. The shield finger is usually formed by cutting and bending a metal plate and includes a frame surrounding the housing and ground fingers extending from the frame. However, pluggable optical transceivers are presumed to be set within a cage prepared in the host system. The shield finger is required not to interfere with the insertion/extraction of the pluggable optical transceiver into/from the cage. Various structures have been proposed in prior arts to assemble the shield finger with the housing of the pluggable optical transceiver.
An aspect of present application relates to the optical transceiver, which is plugged into a cage prepared in the host system. The optical transceiver includes an optical receptacle, housing, and a shield finger. The optical receptacle receives an external optical connector. The housing, which encloses an electronic circuit and an optical component, is continuous to the optical receptacle. The shield finger warps an interface between the optical receptacle and the housing. A feature of the present optical transceiver is that the shield finger provides a hook engaged with art inner surface of the housing passing through the hole.
The foregoing and other purposes, aspects and advantages will he better understood from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:
Next, some embodiments according to the present invention will be described as referring to drawings. In the description of the drawings, numerals or symbols same with or similar to each other will refer to elements same with or similar to each other without duplicating explanations.
An optical transceiver of the present invention is applicable to the optical communication system. In particular, an optical transceiver is a basic component to convert signals between the electrical form and the optical form. The optical transceiver of the present embodiment is to be inserted into a cage prepared in the host system of the optical communication system.
The top housing 4 and the bottom housing 5 extend longitudinally from the front to the rear and form an inner space within which the receiver subassembly 6, the transmitter subassembly 7, the circuit boards, 8 and 8, the holder 9, and the heat spreaders 11 are installed. The top housing 4 has a function of a ceiling to cover the inner space, and the bottom housing 5 provides a bottom and sides to form the inner space. Thus the inner space is electrically shielded by the top housing 4 and the bottom housing 5. The bottom housing 5 provides an optical receptacle 15 in the front end thereof to receive an external optical connector therein.
Two subassemblies, 6 and 7, are placed in side by side in the front of the inner space. The receiver subassembly 6 is electrically connected to the circuit board 8 with a flexible printed circuit (FPC), and the transmitter subassembly 7 is also connected to the circuit hoard 8 with another FPC. An electrical signal converted from a received optical signal by the receiver subassembly 6 is transmitted to the circuit board 8 via the FPC, and another electrical signal generated by the circuit board 8 is sent to the transmitter subassembly 7 through another FPC.
The circuit board 8 of the present embodiment includes a upper substrate 8A and a lower substrate 8B, where both substrates, 8A and 8B, mount electronic components thereon constituting electronic circuits such as a driver to generate a driving signal sent to the transmitter subassembly 7 via the FPC to drive the transmitter subassembly 7 and an amplifier to amplify the electrical signal provided from the receiver subassembly 6 via the FPC.
The holder 9 is put between the upper and lower substrates, 8A and 8B, and rigidly holds the substrates, 8A and 8B. Although the present embodiment provides the upper and lower substrates, 8A and 8B, the optical transceiver 1 may install only one substrate to mount the electronic circuits above described. In such an arrangement, the holder 9 becomes unnecessary. The heat spreaders 11 dissipates heat generated by the receiver subassembly 6, the transmitter subassembly 7, and the electronic circuits mounted on the substrates, 8A and 8B, to the top housing 4 and the bottom housing 5. The heat spreaders 11 are optionally prepared for electrical and optical components that generate heat.
The shield partition 12 prevents EMI radiations generated in the inner space of the primary portion 2 from leaking externally. The actuator 13 and the bail 14 are assembled in the front end of the bottom housing 5. The actuator 13 provides a projection latched with the cage when the optical transceiver 1 is set in the cage and the projection once latched with the cage prevents the optical transceiver 1 from slipping out from the cage. The bail 14, which works with the actuator 13, may release the engagement of the projection of the actuator 13 with the cage. Then, the optical transceiver 1 may be extracted from the cage.
The optical transceiver 1 may operate in a transmission speed exceeding 10 Gbps, which means that EMI radiations of high frequencies are generated within the optical transceiver. The EMI radiations are easily leaked out from the optical transceiver 1 as frequencies thereof becomes higher. The optical transceiver 1 of the present embodiment provides, as mechanisms to prevent the EMI radiations from leaking out, the inner space is tightly shielded by the top housing 4, the bottom housing 5, and the shield partition 12. In addition, the top housing 4 and the bottom housing 5 are grounded to the cage by an electrically conductive component accompanied with a physically elastic function.
The shield finger 3 is the component providing the physically elastic function and made of electrically conductive material.
The hooks 33, which have a U-shape, are hooked with rectangular holes 41 prepared in the top housing 4 and having a depth greater than 1 mm. The hooks 33 and the holes 41 are mechanism to assemble the shield finger 3 with the top housing 4. A feature of the hooks 33 and the rectangular holes 41 of the present embodiment is that they are arranged in diagonal, or not in parallel and not in perpendicular, to the longitudinal direction of the optical transceiver 1, where the longitudinal direction is the direction along which the optical transceiver 1 is set within the cage. This arrangement of the hooks 33 and the openings 41 may effectively secure the smooth insertion of the optical transceiver 1 into the cage without interfering with an undulation of the cage shell.
Referring to
The frame portions, 32A to 32C, except for the portions, 32D and 32E, are bent inwardly at respective rear edges 32t. These rear edges 32t are set within the grooves formed in the bottom housing 5. The rear edges 32t bent inward may avoid the interference of the sides, 32A to 32C, with the insertion port of the cage. The rest portions, 32D and 32E, facing the top housing 4 also provides respective rear edges, 32H and 32J, bent inward, and edges, 32F and 32G, facing to each other also bent inward. These edges, 32F to 32J, are set in respective grooves 43 prepared in the top housing 4. As shown in
This arrangement of the rear edges, 32H and 32J, namely, making the substantial angle against the longitudinal direction of the optical transceiver 1, the edges, 32H and 32J, become in contact with the edge of the cage at only one point. Moreover, this point smoothly slides on the edge of the cage along the insertion of the optical transceiver 1 into the cage.
The hook 33 provides a cut 33A with a U-shape and a tab 33B surrounded and formed by the cut 33A, where the tab 33B is bent inwardly twice to form a U-shaped cross section.
Assembling the shield 3 with the top housing 4 and setting the tab 33B into the hole 41, the intermediate tab 33b is further bent inwardly until the end bend becomes a right angle such that the end tab 33a is hooked on the inner surface 4A of the top housing 4, as shown in
The tab 33B has a width of about 0.5 mm and a length of about 1.0 mm before it is bent twice, and the cut 33A to form the tab 33B has a width of about 1.0 mm. Thus, the arrangement of the hook 33 and the process to engage the hook 33 with the hole 41 may be visually inspected.
The cut 33A possibly lowers the stiffness of the shield finger 3. However, the shield finger 3, in particular the respective portions, 32A to 32E, surround the top and bottom housings, 4 and 5, each providing the rear edges, 32t, 32H, and 32J, and the flaps, 32F and 32G, in the sides, 32D and 32E; the shield finger 3 ensures the stiffness thereof.
The present embodiment enhances the stiffness of the top frame 32D by the existence of the hook 33. That is, the hook 33 is formed so as to cross the lines, L1 and L2, and the tab 33B just faces the corner 32a to intersect the line L3 by a right angle. The tab 33B, which is bent twice, faces the corner 32a, and the stiffness of the top frame 32D may be maintained. The other frame 32E has the arrangement of the tab 33B same with that in the frame 32D.
The lines, L1 and L2, along which the top frames are easily deformed, radially extend from the corner 32a, and the hook 33 is formed so as to cross the lines, L1 and L2. That is, the lines, L1 and L2, are drawn to bisect the angle between the rear edge 32J and the flap 32F. The arrangement of the hook 33 may be optional. For instance, a hook having a narrower width may be formed closer to the corner 32a. Thus, a feature of the hook 33 is to be formed so as to cross the lines radially extended from the corner 32a (or 32b) so as to bisect the angle of the corner 32a (or 32b).
Specifically, the hole 41A of the present embodiment is formed by two steps.
In the present embodiment, an element attached to one of the die and another element attached to the other element are set offset but partly overlapped. Those arrangements of the elements may form a hole with a step therein. Moreover, in the present embodiment, the element attached to the upper die has a size greater than a size of the other element attached to the lower die, which secures the overlap relation between two elements.
Specifically, as shown in
On the other hand, the hole 41A piercing the top housing 4 becomes a leak path for the EMI radiation from the inside of the housing 2. Accordingly, the hole 41A is preferably as small as possible. Specifically, the size of the hole 41A is preferably 1/10 to 1/20 at most of wavelengths of EMI radiations to be shielded. The optical transceiver 1 of the present embodiment operates at 10 Gbps, which means that high frequency signals with frequencies at least 5 GHz. should he considered. Accordingly, the hole 41A preferably has a size of 1.5 to 3.0 mm at most, and 0.75 to 1.5 mm at most for the signal of 20 GHz.
A set or an insertion of the optical transceiver 1 into the cage will be described. The optical transceiver 1 is inserted into the cage C from the rear thereof, as shown in
Similar to the aforementioned embodiment, the side 132E of the frame 132 is easily deformed along the lines, L4 and L5, extending from the corner 132b. Forming the hook 133 with an as enhanced width so as to cross the lines, L4 and L5, the frame 132 becomes hard to be deformed. In order to avoid the cut 133A or the tab 133B interfered with the edge of the cage C, the hook 133 is preferably to be formed so as to make an inclined angle with respect to the longitudinal direction of the optical transceiver 101 and to be formed in an extended width. However, a hook with an enhanced width, which equivalently expands an aspect ratio of the depth of the hook 133 against the width, leaves anxiety for reducing tolerance to the hooking.
The hook of the present embodiment has the C-shaped cut 133A and the tab 133B extending within the cut 133A, which forms the C-shape with partially widened cut width. This arrangement may make the avoidance of the interference with the edge of the cage to be consistent with the stiffness of the frame 132. The present embodiment has the C-shaped cut 133A; but the frame 132 may have an H-shaped cut. The shield finger 103 of the present embodiment, similar to the aforementioned embodiment, provides the hook 133 with the tab 133B hooked with the top housing 104 of the optical transceiver 101. Accordingly, the frame 132 is hard to be peeled of even when the optical transceiver 101 is set within the cage of the host system.
Moreover, the cut 233A has edges 233f facing to each other and extending so as to intersect the longitudinal direction of the optical transceiver 1 by an angle deviated from the right angle; the optical transceiver 1 with the shield finger 231 may be smoothly inserted into and extracted from the cage of the host system without interfering. The embodiment of the hook 233 shown in
In the foregoing detailed description, the apparatus of the present invention have been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the present invention. The present specification and figures are accordingly to be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014-042851 | Mar 2014 | JP | national |