Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6292081
-
Patent Number
6,292,081
-
Date Filed
Thursday, October 28, 199926 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, September 18, 200124 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Barnhardt III; Hubert J.
- Massaroni; Kenneth M.
- Gardner; Kelly A.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 336 65
- 336 233
- 336 192
- 336 229
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
A surface mount, tunable inductor (200) includes a core (205) that is substantially toroidal in shape. The core (205) has a first flattened surface (206) and a second flattened surface (207) opposite the first flattened surface (206), and a hole (208) is formed through the core (205). A wire (210) is wound about the core (205) and terminates in first and second leads (215). The inductor (200) also includes a substrate (220) on which first and second conductive pads (225) are formed. Each of the wire leads (215) is electrically coupled to one of the conductive pads (225), and an adhesive (240) secures the first flattened surface (207) of the core (205) to the substrate (220).
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to inductors, and more specifically to toroidal inductors for use in communication electronics.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Inductors that are commonly used in communication devices include core material around which one or more wires are coiled to form magnetic fields when current is applied. Typically, an inductor includes a core about which a wire is wound, and the wire terminates in two leads. The leads are inserted through holes in a printed circuit board to mount the inductor into a communication device. Leaded components, however, are undesirable in large volume manufacturing applications because each component must be manually disentangled from other components and pulled from a bin by a human operator. The component leads must then be manually straightened, adjusted at the correct distance from one another, and then threaded into the printed circuit board holes. Additionally, the component leads must be bent to secure the component during a wave soldering process, and excess wire must be trimmed from the leads. It can be seen that this process is time consuming and that over-handling and bending of the leads can result in breakage or deformation. Furthermore, if the wire leads are not stripped to the correct length, even proper assembly can result in poor mechanical and electrical coupling if, for example, the wire insulation extends through the printed circuit board hole to prevent the formation of adequate solder connections.
Alternatively, an inductor can be manufactured as a surface mount device, i.e., one that is mounted directly to the surface of a printed circuit board. To mount the inductor, it is placed on the surface of the board, which is moved through an oven in a solder reflow process. The temperatures of the oven are sufficiently high to liquefy solder placed between the inductor and the printed circuit board, and, once the board has cooled, the solder hardens to provide a mechanical and electrical connection between the inductor and the printed circuit board.
Some chip-type surface mount inductors are rectangular in shape. The wire surrounding the core is usually encapsulated in a plastic or other non-conductive material, and electrically conductive terminals at each end of the rectangular device are exposed for connection to a printed circuit board. Due to the rectangular shape, however, the magnetic field radiates outward, worsening the Q of the device and permitting flux leakage.
Toroidal inductors can be used to contain the magnetic field within the core, thereby preventing flux leakage and providing a better Q. One such device
100
is depicted in FIG.
1
. As shown, the core
105
is toroidal, and a wire
110
is wound around the core
105
. The wire
110
terminates in leads
115
that can be inserted into a printed circuit board for mounting.
Toroidal surface mount inductors can also be formed. These inductors are typically packaged in a non-conductive encapsulant material or housing. Electrically conductive device terminations are then provided on the exterior of the housing so that the device can be reflowed to a printed circuit board. Although the mounting process is simplified in this way, use of such an inductor can cause performance problems because the wire coils are not accessible for tuning. As a result, conventional surface mount toroidal inductors are only practical for use in devices in which a broad range of tolerances is acceptable. An additional consideration is that horizontally packaged toroidal inductors consume a large amount of space on a printed circuit board, and space considerations are of the utmost importance in consumer electronics, portable devices, and many other communication devices. Vertically mounted surface mount toroidal inductors, on the other hand, may lack mechanical integrity and can therefore be unreliable in portable devices or devices subject to vibration, temperature extremes, and other environmental conditions.
Thus, what is needed is a surface mount toroidal inductor that can be tuned for use in communication devices.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a front view of a conventional toroidal inductor.
FIG. 2
shows a substantially toroidal core in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 3
shows the core of
FIG. 2
after winding with a wire in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 4
is a front view of a tunable, toroidal inductor, which includes the core and winding of
FIGS. 2 and 3
in accordance with the present invention.
FIG. 5
depicts the mounting of the inductor of
FIG. 4
to a separate substrate in accordance with the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
As mentioned briefly in the Background of the Invention hereof, conventional surface mount chip inductors are generally not tunable and do not perform as well as toroidal inductors. Although toroidal inductors can be surface-mounted, existing surface mount toroidal inductors also cannot be tuned. Furthermore, such toroidal inductors often require a relatively large amount of space for mounting, or the mechanical bonds between the inductor and a printed circuit board may lack strength due to a vertical orientation of the toroidal core.
The surface mount toroidal inductor of the present invention solves the problems presented by conventional devices. More specifically, the inductor of the present invention is characterized by a relatively high Q and low flux leakage. It is also tunable, reliable, and can be surface mounted.
FIG. 2
shows a core
205
for a toroidal inductor. According to the present invention, the core
205
is substantially toroidal in shape. However, the toroid
205
is flattened in two locations to form substantially planar opposing surfaces
206
and
207
, which are coupled by the curves surfaces typically associated with a toroid. A hole
208
is formed through the core
205
to complete the substantially toroidal shape of the core
205
. The core
205
may be formed from ferrite or another magnetic material, and it can be manufactured as a molded part.
Once the core
205
has been formed, a wire
210
(
FIG. 3
) is wound through the hole
208
and about the core
205
. Preferably, the winding is adjusted so that no portion of the wire
210
crosses the flattened top surface
206
or the flattened bottom surface
207
. The wire
210
terminates in two leads
215
.
Referring next to
FIG. 4
, the bottom flattened surface
207
is secured to a relatively small substrate
220
, or interposer. This can be done, for instance, through use of a nonconductive adhesive
240
, which lends mechanical strength not present in prior art vertically mounted toroidal inductors. Next, the leads
215
are electrically coupled to conductive contacts
225
formed on the upper surface of the substrate
220
. For most surface mount applications, conductive contacts
230
formed on the lower surface of the substrate
220
, opposite the upper surface, correspond to and are coupled to the upper contacts
225
, respectively. Each upper contact
225
can, for example, be electrically coupled to its corresponding lower contact
230
by a plated via hole formed through the substrate
220
or by metallization deposited at the edge of the substrate
220
and on both surfaces between the upper contact
225
and its corresponding lower contact
230
. In this manner, a surface mount toroidal inductor
200
can be manufactured in accordance with the present invention.
The inductor
200
not only contains the magnetic field within the core
205
, but also is reliably secured to its substrate
220
for greater mechanical integrity despite its vertical orientation. More specifically, since the core
205
itself, rather than merely the wire leads
215
, is mechanically secured to the substrate
220
, the wire leads
215
are not subjected to stress, such as movement and bending, that could result in breakage or disconnection of the leads
215
from the contracts
225
. Furthermore, because the wire
210
and core
205
are not encapsulated or packaged into a housing and because the wire
210
is wound about the curved surfaces of the core
205
, the inductor
200
can be easily tuned at any time simply by pushing the wire coils closer together or farther apart. As a result, the inductor
200
is suitable even for low tolerance applications.
FIG. 5
depicts the use of the surface mount, tunable toroidal inductor
200
in a communication device, such as an amplifier, transmitter, receiver, node, etc., that includes a substrate
250
on which other electronic devices (not shown) are mounted. The substrate
250
can be, for instance, a printed circuit board or a flexible substrate having electrically conductive traces printed thereon for conducting electrical signals. The inductor
200
receives and transmits electrical signals to other circuitry of the substrate
250
via conductive terminals
255
formed on the surface of the substrate
250
.
The inductor
200
is mounted to the substrate
250
in a conventional reflow process. More specifically, a solder paste can be applied to terminals
255
, after which the inductor is placed on the substrate
250
in alignment with the terminals
255
, and the substrate
250
is subjected to temperatures sufficiently high to liquefy the solder. It will be appreciated that the solder used to bond contacts
230
to terminals
255
should liquefy at a temperature lower than that required to liquefy the solder that bonds the wire leads
215
to contacts
225
so that the reflow process does not disconnect the leads
215
from contacts
225
.
Another advantage of the inductor
200
of the present invention is that the flattened upper surface
206
of the toroidal core
205
permits the use of conventional pick-and-place automation to mount the inductor
200
to the substrate
250
. For example, pick-and-place equipment that employs a small suction device can grasp and move the inductor
200
by suctioning to the flattened surface
206
. Automated mass production can therefore be facilitated by tape-and-reel packaging of a large number of inductors. Conversely, completely circular or elliptical prior art toroidal inductors cannot be easily separated from other components, grasped, or placed by typical assembly equipment, which makes them impractical for large scale manufacturing.
Claims
- 1. An inductor, comprising:a core that is substantially toroidal in shape, the core having a first flattened surface and a second flattened surface opposite the first flattened surface, the core further having a hole formed therethrough; a wire wound about the core and terminating in first and second leads; a substrate having first and second contacts formed on an upper surface thereof; and an adhesive for securing the first flattened surface of the core to the upper surface of the substrate, wherein the first and second leads are electrically coupled to the first and second contacts.
- 2. The inductor of claim 1, wherein the substrate further comprises third and fourth contacts that are electrically coupled, respectively, to the first and second contacts for coupling to an external device.
- 3. The inductor of claim 2, wherein the third and fourth contacts are formed on a lower surface of the substrate opposite the upper surface.
- 4. The inductor of claim 3, wherein the wire is accessible and can be moved about the core.
- 5. The inductor of claim 4, wherein the core is formed of ferrite.
- 6. The inductor of claim 5, wherein the wire is electrically conductive.
- 7. The inductor of claim 6, wherein the first and second contacts are coupled, respectively, to the third and fourth contacts metallization deposited on the substrate.
- 8. An electronic device, comprising:a device substrate having terminals formed thereon; and an inductor that is tunable and that is surface mount to the device substrate, the inductor comprising: a core that is substantially toroidal in shape, the core having a first flattened surface and a second flattened surface opposite the first flattened surface, the core further having a hole formed therethrough; a wire wound about the core and terminating in first and second leads; an inductor substrate having first and second contacts formed on an upper surface thereof and each coupled to one of the wire leads, and having third and fourth contacts formed on a lower surface thereof and coupled, respectively, to the first and second contacts; and an adhesive for securing the first flattened surface of the core to the upper surface of the inductor substrate, wherein each of the third and fourth contacts is coupled to one of the terminals formed on the inductor substrate.
- 9. The electronic device of claim 8, wherein the wire of the inductor is accessible and can be moved about the core.
- 10. The electronic device of claim 9, wherein the core of the inductor is formed of ferrite.
- 11. The electronic device of claim 10, wherein the wire of the inductor is electrically conductive.
- 12. The electronic device of claim 11, wherein the first and second contacts are coupled, respectively, to the third and fourth contacts by metallization deposited on the inductor substrate.
- 13. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein the wire leads are soldered to the first and second contacts.
- 14. The electronic device of claim 13, wherein the third and fourth contacts are soldered to the terminals.
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Date |
Kind |
|
4967175 |
Berg et al. |
Oct 1990 |
|
|
6033594 |
Enokido et al. |
Mar 2000 |
|
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| Number |
Date |
Country |
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May 1977 |
JP |
| 406112046-A |
Apr 1994 |
JP |