This subject invention relates to wearable electronics and fasteners.
Wearable electronics are facilitated by electrically active fabrics, i.e. e-textiles, which embed electrical conductors into the textile and provide a means for connecting said conductors to electronic devices and each other. These devices may include decorative displays, phone chargers, haptic devices, fitness trackers and sensors, medical devices, etc.
Such a connection is often achieved via a fastener or closure, such as a magnetic clasp, hook-and-loop fastener, screw fastener, snap or popper. This connection presents a difficulty, then, in electrically connecting the fastener or closure to an e-textile conductor.
Several methods have been tried and are known in the art, such as the use of conductive thread or fabric, or soldering or crimping a conductor wire to the fastener. However, conductive threads and fabrics are generally expensive or have high resistivity, making them unsuitable for many applications, as well as longevity and robustness issues such as breakage of the conductive fibers or fraying, which causes short circuits between neighboring conductive thread traces. Crimp or solder connections require an uninsulated portion of wire and typically manual labor to make the connection which becomes costly if many such connections must be made. Likewise, each exposed crimp or solder connection becomes a weak point and a possible point of failure. The labor increases if multiple connections must be made at intervals to the same insulated conductor, such as a common power or ground conductor, since the conductor must be broken or the insulation otherwise stripped at each interval to make the connection. None of these connection methods is ideally amenable to mass production via machine assembly.
Featured is a snap fastener system including a conductive first snap fastener portion in electrical and physical contact with a first electronic component, a second snap fastener portion, and a snap ring including tines mated to one of the first and/or second snap fastener portions and including one or more conductive insulation displacement tines which cut through the insulation covering a wire to be electrically coupled to the first electronic component.
In one embodiment, the first snap fastener portion may include a stud, the second snap fastener portion may include a snap ring receptacle including a conductive socket receiving the first fastener portion stud therein, and the snap ring may be mated to the snap ring receptacle. The first snap fastener portion may include a conductive socket, the second snap fastener portion may include a stud received in the conductive socket of the first snap fastener portion, and the snap ring may be mated to the second snap fastener portion. The first electronic component may be a printed circuit board soldered to the conductive first fastener portion. The snap ring receptacle may include a passage threrethrough receiving the snap ring tines. The snap ring receptacle may be located over the wire and the snap ring may be located under the wire. The wire may be associated with a fabric and the snap ring tines may pierce through the fabric physically capturing the fabric between the snap ring receptacle and snap ring. The second snap fastener portion may include a passage threrethrough receiving the snap ring tines. The snap ring receptacle may be located over the wire and the snap ring mat be located under the wire. The wire may be associated with a fabric and the snap ring tines may pierce through the fabric physically capturing the fabric between the snap ring receptacle and snap ring. The insulation displacement tines may include spaced knife edges on each side of a channel sized to receive the wire therein. The edges of the tines may be angled and coverage towards the channel. The insulation displacement tines may be configured to pierce the insulation covering the wire to be electrically coupled to the first electrical component. The snap fastener system may include two opposing insulation displacement tines. The snap fastener system may include a cover about the snap ring. The cover may include at least one recess for receiving the wire therein. The snap fastener system may include a cover about the snap ring. The cover may include at least one recess for receiving the wire therein. The one or more conductive insulation displacement tines may be configured to receive wires of different gauges. The snap fastener system may include a conductive second snap fastener portion electrically isolated from the conductive first snap fastener portion and in electrical and physical contact with the first electrical component. The snap fastener system may include a center insulation displacement connector electrically isolated from the snap ring and/or the first snap fastener portion including one or more conductive insulation displacement tines which cut through the insulation covering a second wire to be electrically coupled to the first electrical component. The snap fastener portion may include one or more conductive foot or feet configured to reduce contact area on the first electronic component. The snap fastener portion may include one or more conductive foot or feet configured to provide for surface trace routing from beneath the snap fastener position. The conductive first snap fastener portion may include an alignment key configured to prevent rotation of the conductive snap ring portion disposed in surface mount technology (SMT) tape. The second snap fastener portion may include an alignment key configured to prevent rotation of the conductive snap ring portion disposed in SMT tape. The snap ring may include an alignment key configured to prevent rotation of the conductive snap ring portion disposed in SMT tape.
Featured is a method of manufacturing a snap fastener system, the method including providing a conductive first snap fastener portion in electrical and physical contact with a first electrical component, providing a second snap fastener portion, providing a snap ring including one or more tines mated to one of the first and/or second snap fastener portions and including one or more conductive insulation displacement tines which cut through the insulation covering a wire to be electrically coupled to the first electronic component, and providing overlay tape to a circumferential edge of the second snap fastener portion configured to be received by a vacuum pickup system.
The subject invention, however, in other embodiments, need not achieve all these objectives and the claims hereof should not be limited to structures or methods capable of achieving these objectives.
Other objects, features and advantages will occur to those skilled in the art from the following description of a preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, in which:
Aside from the preferred embodiment or embodiments disclosed below, this invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Thus, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. If only one embodiment is described herein, the claims hereof are not to be limited to that embodiment. Moreover, the claims hereof are not to be read restrictively unless there is clear and convincing evidence manifesting a certain exclusion, restriction, or disclaimer.
Disclosed herein is a fabric closure incorporating an integral insulation-displacement feature for electrical connection of an unbroken insulated wire without prior removal or other treatment of the wire insulation ideally including a strain relief and wire retention feature.
A typical insulation-displacement closure mechanism preferably includes an attachment unit and a closure unit, as in a typical snap closure, with at least one insulation-displacement connector feature built into at least one of these units for electrically connecting to an insulated wire. In a preferred embodiment, the insulation-displacement closure mechanism would typically also include an insulation displacement connector acceptance feature, for accepting (e.g., providing passage of or space for) the insulation displacement contact (IDC) feature without compromising its electrical connection; a wire retention feature for securing a wire to the active portion of an IDC feature and preventing removal of the wire; and a wire acceptance feature for accepting (providing passage of or space for) a wire, including insulation, without damaging said wire or compromising the attachment of the snap assembly to the garment, and which may also serve as a wire guide feature.
As in a typical snap closure, an attachment unit and closure unit are mechanically and nonremovably affixed to one another by a design feature for this purpose. Affixing the attachment unit and closure unit simultaneously captures an insulated wire, electrically connects to said wire via insulation displacement, and affixes the snap to a substrate (typically fabric or other material comprising a wearable garment) by capturing a portion of said substrate.
In a typical application, an IDC snap closure assembly would mate with a mating assembly comprising either another IDC snap closure assembly, a conventional snap assembly, or a mating closure unit disposed on an electronic device. In the latter case, the closure unit would typically be recessed in or protrude from the device enclosure, and may consist of any suitable mating closure unit, including an IDC snap assembly, conventional snap assembly, or closure unit directly soldered to a PCB, and the like.
Typically, snap ring receptacle 22,
Thus, the electrical connection between lands 18,
In this particular embodiment, snap ring 26 is located on one side of fabric 32 and snap ring receptacle 22 is located on the other side of the fabric and tines 28 are driven through the fabric thus physically capturing the fabric between snap ring receptacle 22 and snap ring 26. In this way, PCB 14 can be easily moved from and attached to fabric 32 in order to make electrical contact with one or more of the wires embedded therein.
Cover 40 (made of a nonconductive protective material such as rubber) may be included about (e.g., overmolded) snap ring 26 and may include one or more opposing recesses 42a, 42b in side wall 44 to capture the wire and further insulate the snap ring 26.
The insulation displacement tines may include spaced knifed edges 50a, 50b,
In another design, the insulation displacement tines may be configured to pierce the insulation covering the wire to be electrically coupled to the first electrical component. For example,
In one design, snap fastener system 10 shown in one or more of
Snap fastener system 10 also preferably includes center insulation displacement connector 76,
In another embodiment, conductive second snap fastener portion 70′,
In one design, conductive first snap fastener portion, e.g., conductive male portion 12 shown in one more of
In one example, one or more of conductive first snap fastener portion, male portion 12, second snap fastener portion, snap ring receptacle 22, and/or snap ring 26, shown in one or more of
In one example, the method of manufacturing a snap fastener system 100 shown in one or more of
Although specific features of the invention are shown in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only as each feature may be combined with any or all of the other features in accordance with the invention. The words “including”, “comprising”, “having”, and “with” as used herein are to be interpreted broadly and comprehensively and are not limited to any physical interconnection. Moreover, any embodiments disclosed in the subject application are not to be taken as the only possible embodiments. Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and are within the following claims.
In addition, any amendment presented during the prosecution of the patent application for this patent is not a disclaimer of any claim element presented in the application as filed: those skilled in the art cannot reasonably be expected to draft a claim that would literally encompass all possible equivalents, many equivalents will be unforeseeable at the time of the amendment and are beyond a fair interpretation of what is to be surrendered (if anything), the rationale underlying the amendment may bear no more than a tangential relation to many equivalents, and/or there are many other reasons the applicant cannot be expected to describe certain insubstantial substitutes for any claim element amended.
This application claims benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/538,928 filed Jul. 31, 2017, under 35 U.S.C. §§ 119, 120, 363, 365, and 37 C.F.R. § 1.55 and § 1.78, and is incorporated herein by this reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190097329 A1 | Mar 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62538928 | Jul 2017 | US |