High frequency electrical connector assembly
11715892 · 2023-08-01
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01R9/0515
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/6583
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/6599
ELECTRICITY
H01R9/0527
ELECTRICITY
H01R24/54
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01R13/6583
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A connector assembly that includes a receptacle with inner and outer shells which have a front end for mating with a mating connector and a back end configured to connect to a printed circuit board. Receptacle primary and secondary ground connections are located on one of the shells. A plug with an outer shell that supports a pin contact to mate with the socket contact. The outer shell of the plug has a front end for mating with the front end of the receptacle and a back end that is configured to connect to a coaxial cable. Plug primary and secondary ground connections are located on the outer shell. When the receptacle and plug are mated, the primary ground connections form a primary grounding path through the assembly and the secondary ground connections form a secondary grounding path through the assembly, thereby electrically connecting the plug with the board.
Claims
1. An electrical connector assembly, comprising: a receptacle including an inner conductive shell and an outer conductive shell, the inner conductive shell supporting at least one socket contact therein, the outer conductive shell enclosing the inner conductive shell, each of the inner conductive shell and the outer conductive shell has a respective front end for mating with a mating connector and a respective back end configured to connect to a printed circuit board, a receptacle primary ground connection located on the inner conductive shell, and a receptacle secondary ground connection located on the outer conductive shell, wherein a portion of the outer conductive shell of the receptacle forms a tab; and a plug including an outer shell supporting at least one pin contact configured to mate with the at least one socket contact of the receptacle, the outer shell of the plug having a front end for mating with the front end of the receptacle, and a back end configured to connect to a coaxial cable, a plug primary ground connection located on an inner surface of the outer shell of the plug, and a plug secondary ground connection located on an outer surface of the outer shell of the plug, wherein the outer shell of the plug is configured to receive the tab of the receptacle to mechanically and electrically connect the plug and receptacle together, wherein when the receptacle and plug are mated, the receptacle and plug primary ground connections form a primary grounding path through the assembly and the receptacle and plug secondary ground connections form a secondary grounding path through the assembly, thereby electrically connecting the plug with the printed circuit board.
2. The electrical connector assembly of claim 1, wherein each of the primary and secondary ground connections comprises one or more contact points.
3. The electrical connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the primary and secondary ground connections of the receptacle and plug, respectively, define separate grounding paths through the electrical connector assembly to the printed circuit board.
4. The electrical connector assembly of claim 3, wherein the mechanical connection is defined by a snap engagement between the tab of the receptacle and a corresponding engagement member of the plug.
5. The electrical connector assembly of claim 1, wherein one of the primary and secondary ground connections of each of the receptacle and plug provides a mechanical connection configured to mechanically engage the front ends of the receptacle and plug.
6. The electrical connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the outer shell forms an outer surface of the receptacle.
7. The electrical connector assembly of claim 1, wherein each of the outer shell and the inner shell of the receptacle has a tubular shape.
8. An electrical connector assembly, comprising: a receptacle including an inner conductive shell and an outer conductive shell, the inner conductive shell supporting at least one socket contact therein, wherein the outer conductive shell encloses the inner conductive shell, each of the inner conductive shell and the outer conductive shell have a respective front end for mating with a mating connector and a respective back end configured to electrically connect to a printed circuit board, and the receptacle including a receptacle primary ground connection on the inner conductive shell and a receptacle secondary ground connection on the outer conductive shell, wherein the outer conductive shell of the receptacle comprises a biasing member extending radially inward from the outer conductive shell; and a plug including an outer conductive shell supporting at least one pin contact configured to mate with the at least one socket contact of the receptacle, the outer conductive shell of the plug having a front end for mating with the front end of the receptacle, and a back end configured to electrically connect to a coaxial cable, and the plug including a plug primary ground connection and a plug secondary ground connection, wherein the outer conductive shell of the plug is configured to receive the biasing member of the receptacle within an annular recess on the outer surface of the outer shell of the plug to mechanically and electrically connect the plug and receptacle together, wherein when the receptacle and plug are mated, the receptacle and plug primary ground connections form a primary grounding path through the assembly and the receptacle and plug secondary ground connections form a secondary grounding path through the assembly, thereby electrically connecting the plug and the printed circuit board.
9. The electrical connector assembly of claim 8, wherein each of the primary and secondary receptacle ground connections comprises one or more contact points on the inner and outer conductive shells, respectively, of the receptacle and each of the primary and secondary plug ground connections comprises one or more contact points on the outer conductive shell of the plug.
10. The electrical connector assembly of claim 8, wherein the primary and secondary ground connections of the receptacle and plug, respectively, define separate grounding paths through the electrical connector assembly to the printed circuit board.
11. The electrical connector assembly of claim 8, wherein the outer shell forms an outer surface of the receptacle.
12. The electrical connector assembly of claim 8, wherein each of the outer shell and the inner shell of the receptacle has a tubular shape.
13. An electrical connector assembly, comprising: a receptacle including an outer tubular shell, the outer tubular shell supporting at least one socket contact therein, the outer tubular shell having a front end for mating with a mating connector and a back end configured to electrically connect to a printed circuit board, and the receptacle including one or more receptacle ground connections, wherein at least one of the receptacle ground connections is located on an inner surface of the outer tubular shell, wherein the outer tubular shell of the receptacle comprises a biasing member; and a plug including an outer shell supporting at least one pin contact configured to mate with the at least one socket contact of the receptacle, the outer shell of the plug having a front end for mating with the front end of the receptacle, and a back end configured to electrically connect to a coaxial cable, and the plug including one or more plug ground connections, wherein the outer shell of the plug is configured to receive the biasing member of the receptacle to mechanically and electrically connect the plug and receptacle together, wherein when the receptacle and plug are mated, the receptacle and plug ground connections form one or more grounding paths through the electrical connector assembly, thereby electrically connecting the plug to the printed circuit board, and wherein one of the receptacle ground connections with one of the plug ground connections are configured to mechanically engage the front ends of the receptacle and plug with one another, wherein the mechanical connection is defined by a snap engagement between the biasing member on the receptacle and a corresponding engagement member of the plug.
14. The electrical connector assembly of claim 13, wherein the mechanical connection is defined by engagement between the biasing member on the receptacle and a corresponding engagement member on the outer shell of the plug.
15. The electrical connector assembly of claim 13, wherein each of the outer tubular shell of the receptacle and the outer shell of the plug is conductive.
16. The electrical connector assembly of claim 15, wherein each of the primary and secondary ground connections comprises one or more contact points.
17. The electrical connector assembly of claim 15, wherein one of the grounding paths formed when the receptacle and plug are mated extends through the outer tubular shell of the receptacle and the outer shell of the plug.
18. The electrical connector assembly of claim 15, wherein the receptacle has an inner conductive shell received inside of the outer tubular shell, and the inner conductive shell supports the at least one socket contact.
19. The electrical connector assembly of claim 13, wherein the outer tubular shell of the receptacle is devoid of threads.
20. The electrical connector assembly of claim 13, wherein the outer shell of the plug is devoid of threads.
21. The electrical connector assembly of claim 13, wherein the biasing member defines a mechanical connection comprising a resilient member.
22. The electrical connector assembly of claim 21, wherein the resilient member is a tab.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. It is to be understood that the drawings illustrate only some examples of the disclosure and other examples or combinations of various examples that are not specifically illustrated in the figures may still fall within the scope of this disclosure. Examples will now be described with additional detail through the use of the drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) Referring to the figures, the present disclosure relates to exemplary examples of electrical connectors and the assembly thereof that are designed to significantly improve RF performance, such as for high frequency applications, e.g. up to 18 GHz. The present disclosure may be, for example, RF connectors and assemblies for CATV broadband applications configured to provide an intuitive user experience suitable for consumer level usage; enable bandwidth expansion for future systems and protocols, including convergence with 5G; deliver compatibility with existing tooling infrastructure at the installer level; reduce total cost of ownership across the value chain, especially reduced truck rolls; and/or achieve high RF ingress protection against current and future wireless bands.
(11) The electrical connectors and assembly thereof of the present disclosure may (1) incorporate a push-on interface which simplifies mating to eliminate or reduce connectivity issues during self-installation applications; (2) provide higher density packaging potential by removing wrench clearance needs between connectors; (3) incorporate a pinned interface, i.e. there is a dedicated center contact or signal pin in the interface of the plug side of the connector eliminating the need to feed the cable center conductor through to the interface to become the center contact of the plug, for consistent RF impedance and therefore performance headroom for higher frequencies (up to 18 GHz) and for high reliability contact integrity and dependable extended field life; and/or (4) provide a robust scoop-proof interface configured such that when a mating connector is partially mated and then angled in any non-coaxial position, it is not possible to “scoop” with the mating interface and make contact with or damage any internal components thereof, such as the outer contact, insulator, or center contact. The scoop-proof configuration may be achieved, for example, by recessing the contact members in the outer ground/shroud.
(12) The electrical connectors and assembly thereof of the present disclosure may also have a configuration that allows for full sheet metal construction for long term cost benefit such as by eliminating the need to manufacture threads; provides standard compression crimp termination and existing tools; and/or leverages field proven interface technology from latest generation CMTS routers, such as blind mate connections between printed circuit boards to achieve robust mechanical and electrical performance for the connector system.
(13) The present disclosure generally provides electrical connectors 102 and 104 and the assembly 100 thereof, which are designed to significantly suppress RF leakage and ingress at the interface of the assembled connectors, by providing a primary ground connection 110 and 112, respectively for each connector. A secondary ground connection 120 and 122, respectively, may also be provided for each connector for further improved RF performance.
(14) The connectors 102 and 104, may be, for example, a plug and receptacle. Each of the plug and receptacle generally has an outer conductive shell 106 and 108, respectively, a dielectric insert 140 and 142, respectively, inside the shell, that supports at least one signal contact, such as a pin 150 or a socket 152, respectively. Each outer shell 106 and 108 may comprise a front end 130 and 132, respectively, for mating with the other mating connector and a back end 134 and 136, opposite the front end. The back end 134 of the plug 102 is configured to terminate and electrically connect to a coaxial cable C, as seen in
(15) As seen in
(16) As seen in
(17) The primary ground connections 110 and 112 may be any grounding technique, such as grounding through the conductive surface of the shells 106 or 108 of the connectors, grounding through added ground contacts isolated and connected to the equipment PCB, or grounding through a traditional single ground, and the like. In one example, each of the primary ground connections 110 and 112 is one or more inner contact points 114 and 116, respectively, inside of the outer shells 106 and 108. The primary ground connections 110 and 112 according to the present disclosure provide a connection to ensure the RF signal is passed through the connectors, plug 102 and jack 104, with minimal signal loss.
(18) As seen in
(19) Secondary ground connection 120 and 122 of plug 102 and receptacle 104, respectively, is configured to provide additional grounding at the interface of the connector assembly. The function of the secondary ground connection 120 and 122 according to the present disclosure is to provide a secondary barrier to significantly reduce the power level of the RF signal that leaks out of, or the RF noise that leaks into, the transmission line between the connectors. The secondary ground connections 120 and 122 reduce the leakage or the power level of the leakage to a point that is less than the sensitively of the system where it is used.
(20) Like the primary ground connection, secondary ground connection 120 and 122 of plug 102 and receptacle 104, respectively, may any grounding technique, such as grounding through the conductive surface of the shells 106 or 108 of the connectors, grounding through added ground contacts isolated and connected to the equipment PCB, or grounding through a traditional single ground, and the like. For example, the plug's secondary ground connection 120 may be one or more outer contact points 118 located on the outer surface 162 of the outer shell 106 that connect with one or more inner contact points 119 of the receptacle's ground connection 122, as seen in
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(22) Grounding is also provided by the secondary ground connections 120 and 122 through contact of the outer contact points 118 in the annular recess 164 of the plug 102 with the inner contact points 119 on the inner spring tabs 182 of receptacle's shell 108 when the tabs 182 rest in the annular recess 164. The engagement between the plug's annular recess 164 and the receptacle's spring tabs 182 also provides a mechanical connection between plug 102 and receptacle 104 The added secondary grounding point provided by secondary grounding mechanism 120 may suppress RF leakage of the connector assembly 100 to achieve better than −100 dB even at high frequencies, e.g. −129.89 dB (for 1.2 GHz), −123.24 dB (for 3 GHz), and −117.47 dB (for 6 GHz).
(23) As seen in
(24) In the examples of the present disclosure, the connectors may be round/tubular coaxial connectors and the ground features can be non-round shapes, such as square and still take advantage of the dual grounding shielding benefits. The secondary ground connection can be a directly integrated metal conductive component, or positioned as an independent shield component isolated from the primary ground by a dielectric material, such as air or plastic.
(25) It will be apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings that modifications, combinations, sub-combinations, and variations can be made without departing from the spirit or scope of this disclosure. Likewise, the various examples described may be used individually or in combination with other examples. Those skilled in the art will appreciate various combinations of examples not specifically described or illustrated herein that are still within the scope of this disclosure. In this respect, it is to be understood that the disclosure is not limited to the specific examples set forth and the examples of the disclosure are intended to be illustrative, not limiting.
(26) As used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” include plural referents, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Similarly, the adjective “another,” when used to introduce an element, is intended to mean one or more elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” “having” and similar terms are intended to be inclusive such that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
(27) It is noted that the description and claims may use geometric or relational terms, such as right, left, above, below, upper, lower, top, bottom, linear, arcuate, elongated, parallel, perpendicular, etc. These terms are not intended to limit the disclosure and, in general, are used for convenience to facilitate the description based on the examples shown in the figures. In addition, the geometric or relational terms may not be exact. For instance, walls may not be exactly perpendicular or parallel to one another because of, for example, roughness of surfaces, tolerances allowed in manufacturing, etc., but may still be considered to be perpendicular or parallel.