Stacked receptacles in a connector that each provide side-by-side differential signal contacts, are attached to a circuit board without additional width to accommodate multiple layers of differential signals by using connector wafer inserts that rotate the side-by-side positioned differential signal contacts to front-to-back contacts, the circuit board including a substrate having a plurality of openings to make electrical contact with conductive terminal tail portion inserted therein, the openings being divided into first and second groups of openings, the first group of openings receiving differential signal terminal tails therein and the second group of openings receiving ground terminal tail therein, when a connector is mounted to said circuit board.
|
1. A circuit board for use with a connector carrying differential signals, comprising:
a substrate, the substrate including a plurality of openings formed therein, the openings including plated portions so as to make electrical contact with conductive terminal tail portions inserted therein, the openings being divided into first and second groups of openings, the first group of openings receiving differential signal terminal tails therein when a connector is mounted to said circuit board and the second group of openings receiving ground terminal tails therein when a connector is mounted to said circuit board;
the first group of openings having a plurality of first opening and the second of group of openings having a plurality of second opening,
each of said first opening having a pair of said second openings associated therewith, the first opening and said associated second opening pair being arranged at apexes of an imaginary triangle, two of said first openings being spaced apart from each other and aligned with each other such that said two first openings are contained within a perimeter defined by imaginary lines intersecting said two pairs of associated second openings.
7. A circuit board for use with a connector carrying differential signals, comprising:
a substrate, the substrate including a plurality of vias formed therein, the vias including plated portions so as to make electrical contact with a conductive terminal tail portion inserted therein, said vias being divided into first and second groups of vias, the first group of vias receiving differential signal terminal tails therein when a connector is mounted to said circuit board and the second group of vias receiving ground terminal tails therein when a connector is mounted to said circuit board;
said first group of vias being arranged in a first line of vias and said second group of vias being arranged in second and third lines of vias, the second and third lines of vias being disposed on opposite side of said first line of vias;
the first group of vias having a plurality of first via and the second of group of vias having a plurality of second via, and,
each of said first vias having a pair of said second vias associated therewith, such that pairs of said first vias disposed in said first line of vias are contained within a perimeter defined by imaginary lines intersecting said two pairs of associated second vias disposed in said second and third lines of vias.
14. A circuit board for use with a connector carrying differential signals, comprising:
a substrate, the substrate including a plurality of openings formed therein, the openings including plated portions so as to make electrical contact with conductive terminal tail portions inserted therein, the openings being divided into first and second groups of openings, the first group of openings receiving differential signal terminal tails therein when a connector is mounted to the circuit board and the second group of openings receiving ground terminal tails therein when a connector is mounted to the circuit board;
the first group of openings having a plurality of first opening and the second of group of openings having a plurality of second opening, and
each of said first opening having a pair of said second openings associated therewith, the first opening and the associated second opening pair being arranged at apexes of an imaginary triangle, two of the first openings being spaced apart from each other and aligned with each other such that the two first openings are contained within a perimeter defined by imaginary lines intersecting the two pairs of associated second openings, wherein the substrate including a conductive layer having at least one opening therein devoid of conductive material, the conductive layer opening encompassing the two first openings.
2. The circuit board of
3. The circuit board of
4. The circuit board of
6. The circuit board of
8. The circuit board of
9. The circuit board of
10. The circuit board of
11. The circuit board of
13. The circuit board of
15. The circuit board of
16. The circuit board of
18. The circuit board of
19. The circuit board of
|
This application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/359,739, filed Feb. 22, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,422,483, which in turn claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/655,051, filed Feb. 22, 2005.
This invention relates generally to high speed connectors that are used as vertically stacked receptacle connectors, and more particularly, to connectors utilizing insert wafers that incorporate differential signal terminals which are positioned alongside each other where they appear in the connector receptacle portions and which are turned at their tail portions for joining to a printed circuit board.
Electrical connectors are well known to those of ordinary skill in the electronic arts as generally reliable devices by which electrical signal paths can be extended into and obtained from a printed circuit board. Over the last several years, however, electronic devices and systems have gotten both smaller and faster, making reliable connectors more difficult to design, manufacture and install onto printed circuit boards.
In a connector used in high-speed applications, crosstalk that is likely to occur between closely spaced, high-speed signal paths can be reduced by using differential-voltage signals. A differential signal pair is a pair of terminals or other conductors that together carry a signal but neither of the two conductors is at ground or reference potential. Rather, the voltage on one conductor of a differential pair is, at any given instant, the same magnitude, but opposite polarity as the voltage on the other conductor. A differential pair therefore is analogous to a transmission line, the conductors of which are capacitively and inductively coupled to each other. Crosstalk between two or more differential signal pairs as well as interference of one differential pair on another can be significantly reduced if a good ground plane (or other fixed-voltage reference plane) is provided between the conductors of one differential pair and the conductors of another differential pair as a sort of shield between them.
Each differential signal pair requires at least two capacitively coupled conductors, and it is important for a connector that links a differential signal pair between devices or circuit boards to maintain capacitive coupling. When a connector is used to provide an edge connection for a circuit board or is used as a plug connector, arranging differential signal pairs in a connector so that they are alongside each other and next to each other on the same side of a circuit board can cause the connector width to increase, but when the connector is installed onto a circuit board, connector width should be minimized.
It is therefore a general object of the present invention to provide a circuit board connector which provides one or more receptacle connector, each of which will accept the edge connector of a circuit board or like device.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a stacked receptacle connector, each receptacle of which will accommodate differential signal pairs.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a stacked receptacle connector that enables differential signal pairs to be installed into a connector body using individual inserts in the form of wafers, each of which is relatively easy to manufacture and each of which also allows ground planes to be provided between each wafer insert in an encompassing connector housing.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a connector for use in high speed applications, the connector including an insulative housing with a hollow interior cavity, the cavity accommodating a plurality of terminal signal and ground terminal inserts in the form of thin wafers, each wafer supporting a plurality of conductive terminals, the terminals having contact portions, tail portions and body portions interconnecting the contact and tail portions together, the signal terminals being disposed so that most of the terminals are oriented with their wider sides arranged vertically for broadside capacitive coupling to adjacent corresponding terminals in adjacent wafers, and a small part of the signal terminal body and tail portions being bent and offset about 90 degrees so that the signal terminals are arranged in an edge-to-edge arrangement at the terminal tail portions.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a connector for use with high speed differential signal applications in which terminals are held in assemblies that preferably take the form of insulative wafers, two wafers with conductive signal terminal being assembled together to form a signal terminal wafer assembly and two wafers that contain conductive ground terminals being arranged on opposite sides of the signal terminal assembly to provide reference ground terminal arrangements that flank the signal terminal assembly, the signal terminals having contact portion that are arranged in side-by-side order and termination portions that are arranged in edge-to-edge order.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a unique circuit board layout for accommodating the tail portions of connectors of the structure described above, which circuit board layout facilities the high speed operation of connectors of the invention.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a circuit board with a particular arrangement of traces that enhance the high speed transmission abilities of the connectors of the invention, the circuit board having a plurality of conductive traces extending to mounting through holes disposed in a circuit board, the through holes being arranged in a pattern such that a plurality of ground traces encompass a pair of differential signal traces, and in which the ground traces are arranged at the corners of a four-sided figure, with the differential signal through holes arranged in line within a perimeter defined by the ground through holes.
These and other objects of the present invention are accomplished by way of the structure of the invention. A connector is provided with an insulative housing that has two or more receptacle portions, each of which is capable of accepting a card edge of other similar blade portion of an opposing electronic device, such as an electronic or opto-electronic module. The receptacle connectors of the invention include a plurality of pairs of differential signal terminals, and the terminals have a unique structure which permits them be broadside coupled in pairs along one extent of the connector, and subsequently edge coupled along a remaining extent of the connector.
Multiple inserts are provided which carry terminal that are intended to be designated as carrying differential signals. In this regard, multiple differential signal terminal pairs are supported in an insulative wafer that may be inserted into the connector housing. The signal terminal insert is preferably formed from two interengaging halves, and the terminals of each differential signal pair are spaced apart from each other in a parallel fashion. This is carried on from the terminal contact portions rearwardly in the terminal body portions to a location near the tail portions of the terminals.
The differential signal terminals conductors have their paths rotated in their supporting insert wafer so that they turn about 90 degrees near where the terminal body portions end and this turn extends into the terminal tail portions. Thus, the signal terminals are arranged in a line and are spaced apart along that line in an edge-to-edge arrangement. In this fashion, the terminals may engage in edge coupling along their tail portions and broadside coupling along their contact and body portions.
The halves of the signal terminal wafer inserts have serrated-style bases on which are formed alternating projections and recesses, with the projections of the first of the two insert wafer halves being received within the recesses of the second of the two signal insert wafer halves and vice-versa. In this manner the terminal tails portions are easily arranged in a line in the edge-to-edge fashion stated above.
Additional insert wafers are provided and are arranged in spaces provided between the signal terminal assemblies and these act as ground planes between adjoining signal terminal insert wafers to isolate signals carried through the signal wafers. The heights of the signal and ground terminal insert wafers are different so as to polarize the insert wafers and the connector housing so that ground terminal insert wafers cannot be inserted into a portion of the connector housing that is dedicated to receive a ground terminal insert wafer. Likewise, the connector housing is formed with different wafer-receiving slots, so that a ground wafer slot is capable of receiving only a ground terminal wafer and a signal terminal slot is capable of receiving only a signal terminal wafer assembly.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be clearly understood through a consideration of the following detailed description.
In the course of this description, references will be made to the drawings, in which:
Referring now to
The connector also has a rear face 20, which is shown more clearly in
In the preferred embodiment of the connector 10 illustrated, each signal insert wafer 26 is installed between two ground insert wafers 24 as shown in
As set forth above, the use of differential signals on a circuit board or other device requires two conductors to carry one differential signal with each conductor carrying an equal but opposite polarity signal as its mate. When the stacked receptacles 17 and 19 are both used to provide differential signal connectors, the pairs of side-by-side differential signal conductors in each receptacle 17 and 19 need to be connected to a mating contact on a circuit board 13 to which the connector 10 is attached. Therefore, in order to accommodate the attachment of many differential signal pairs from the top receptacle 19 and those required of the bottom receptacle 17 in the width of the connector 10, the differential signal pairs provided to each receptacle 17 and 19 needs to be “rotated” or somehow made offset so that the differential signal connections from the connector 10 to the circuit board 13 are aligned “front-to-back” or “edge-to-edge” as shown in
Still referring to
Just above the bottom edge 47 of the left half 50 of the signal insert wafer 24 there are a series of notches 55 and teeth 57 (or “valleys” and “peaks”) that run most of the length of the bottom edge 47. In particular, however, a notch 55 is formed immediately in front of the rear edge 53 of the left half of the signal insert wafer. On the right half 52 of the signal wafer's 24 bottom edge 47, a tooth 59 is formed that is immediately in front of the rear edge 53 of the right half 52 such that the tooth 59 on the right-hand half 52 of the insert wafer 24 will engage the notch 55 that is immediately in front of the rear edge 53 of the left half 50. When the left and right halves 50 and 52 are joined together, the notches 55 and teeth 57 of the left half 52 engage the teeth 59 and notches 61 of the right half 52 in a sort of “sawtooth” engagement of each half to the other. This sawtooth, or serrated, arrangement permits the tail portions of the signal terminals to come out of plane and be aligned linearly along the bottom edge of the signal terminal insert wafer.
It can be seen in
The terminals depicted in
In
In the right half 52 of the signal insert wafer 24, there are terminals identical to terminals 261A and 261B except that in the right signal wafer half 52, they lie in a third plane, which is parallel to and displaced or offset from the first plane in which terminals 261A and 261B lie and the second plane in which the pin tails lie. There are offsets in the right half, which are not shown, that extend the terminals in the third plane to the aforementioned second plane such that the pin tails 44 that extend from the bottom edge 47 of the right half 52 will be co-planar with the pin tails 44 that extend from the left half 50 when the two halves are assembled together. The halves 50, 52 of the signal insert wafer may be assembled together with posts and holes as shown in
In claim parlance, the signal terminals in the right side body 65 have a second offset that extends the terminals away from the third plane in a second direction to the aforementioned second plane from which they extend downwardly past the bottom edge of the wafer insert body. The extensions of the left side terminals and right side terminals are laterally displaced from each other, i.e., they are spaced apart from each other as shown in
As shown in
The circuit traces that exit the signal vias 113 are shown in phantom in
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made to these embodiments without departing from the spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined by the appended claims.
Nelson, Richard A., Regnier, Kent E., Avery, Hazelton P., Casher, Patrick R.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
10952882, | Jul 18 2007 | Silk Road Medical, Inc. | Systems and methods for treating a carotid artery |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
5417578, | Dec 24 1992 | WHITAKER CORPORATION, THE | Printed wiring boards having low signal-to-ground ratios |
5522727, | Sep 17 1993 | Japan Aviation Electronics Industry, Limited; NEC Corporation | Electrical angle connector of a printed circuit board type having a plurality of connecting conductive strips of a common length |
6273751, | Aug 28 1998 | SENIOR INDUSTRIES, INC | Electrical shorting assembly for electrical jacks and the like |
6350134, | Jul 25 2000 | TE Connectivity Corporation | Electrical connector having triad contact groups arranged in an alternating inverted sequence |
6607402, | Feb 07 1997 | Amphenol Corporation | Printed circuit board for differential signal electrical connectors |
6848917, | May 06 2002 | Molex, LLC | High-speed differential signal connector with interstitial ground aspect |
20030014864, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Dec 23 2010 | Molex Incorporated | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Aug 19 2015 | Molex Incorporated | Molex, LLC | CHANGE OF NAME SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 062820 | /0197 |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Jul 19 2013 | M1551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Year, Large Entity. |
Jul 06 2017 | M1552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Year, Large Entity. |
Jul 07 2021 | M1553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Year, Large Entity. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
May 01 2015 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Nov 01 2015 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
May 01 2016 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
May 01 2018 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
May 01 2019 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Nov 01 2019 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
May 01 2020 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
May 01 2022 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
May 01 2023 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Nov 01 2023 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
May 01 2024 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
May 01 2026 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |