Wire to board connectors suitable for use in bypass routing assemblies
10367280 ยท 2019-07-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Brian Keith LLOYD (Maumelle, AR, US)
- Gregory B. WALZ (Maumelle, AR, US)
- Bruce REED (Maumelle, AR, US)
- Gregory FITZGERALD (Merrimack, NH, US)
- Ayman ISAAC (Little Rock, AR, US)
- Kent E. REGNIER (Lombard, IL, US)
- Brandon Janowiak (Wheaton, IL, US)
- Darian R. SCHULZ (Little Rock, AR, US)
- Munawar AHMAD (Maumelle, AR, US)
- Eran J. JONES (Conway, AR, US)
- Javier RESENDEZ (Streamwood, IL, US)
- Michael ROST (Lisle, IL, US)
Cpc classification
H01R12/714
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/639
ELECTRICITY
H01R24/60
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/113
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01R24/60
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/639
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/56
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A wire to board connector is provided for connecting cables of cable bypass assemblies to circuitry mounted on a circuit board. The connector has a structure that maintains the geometry of the cable through the connector. The connector includes a pair of edge coupled conductive signal terminals and a ground shield to which the signal terminals are broadside coupled. The connector includes a pair of ground terminals aligned with the signal terminals and both sets of terminals have J-shaped contact portions that flex linearly when the connector is inserted into a receptacle. In another embodiment, the signal terminal contact portions are supported by a compliant member that may deflect when the connectors engage contact pads on a substrate.
Claims
1. A board connector assembly for connecting to a chip package, comprising: a cable including a pair of signal conductors and a ground wire; a connector housing supporting a pair of signal terminals, each signal terminal having a contact portion and a termination portion and a body portion extending therebetween, the connector housing having a mating end, the termination portions being enclosed in the connector housing and the contact portions being disposed exterior of the connector housing and spaced apart from the connector housing mating end; a ground member supported by the connector housing and extending along at least a portion of the terminal body portions, the ground member including a termination portion for connecting to the ground wire and electrically connected to a ground contact portion, the ground contact portion extending from the connector housing such, and the signal contact portions and the ground contact portions including arcuate contact surfaces at distal ends such that when the connector housing is pressed toward a mating surface of a circuit board, pairs of the terminal contact portions move transversely along the circuit board common mating surface transversely to the connector housing longitudinal axis.
2. The board connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the ground contact portion is a pair of ground contact portions and the signal and ground contact portions are arranged in pairs of signal and ground contact portions in a first direction and in pairs of signal and ground contact portions in a second direction.
3. The board connector assembly of claim 2, wherein the first and second directions are transverse to each other.
4. The board connector assembly of claim 2, wherein all of the signal and ground member terminal contact portion arcuate contact surfaces extend in the second direction.
5. The board connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the connector housing includes at least one engagement surface disposed transversely to the connector housing longitudinal axis configured to engage a stop surface of a corresponding connector guide block into which the connector housing may be inserted.
6. The board connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the connector housing has four sides and two of the sides include engagement surfaces disposed thereon.
7. The board connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the connector housing ground member extends completely around the signal terminals.
8. The board connector assembly of claim 7, wherein the terminal contact surfaces extend transversely to the connector housing ground member.
9. The board connector assembly of claim 8, wherein the signal and ground terminal contact surfaces have generally C-shaped or U-shaped configurations.
10. The board connector assembly of claim 1 wherein when the connector housing mating end is pressed against a surface of a circuit board, the signal and ground terminal member terminals move in a transverse direction to the connector housing longitudinal axis and away from a centerline of the connector housing.
11. The board connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the signal and ground terminal contact portions have a J-shaped configuration and wherein the J-shapes are formed from compound curves.
12. The board connector assembly of claim 11, wherein the signal and ground terminals include inflection points disposed between the contact and body portions of the signal and ground terminals.
13. The board connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the signal terminal contact portions are edge coupled to each other and are broadside coupled to the ground member.
14. A bypass cable assembly for connecting circuits of a chip package of a host device to external connector interfaces of the host device, comprising: a chip package including a substrate supporting at least one integrated circuit, the substrate including circuitry extending between leads of the integrated circuit and contacts of the substrate; at least one bypass cable, the bypass cable including a pair of signal conductors extending lengthwise through an insulative body portion, the signal conductors being separated by a first spacing within the insulative body portion, and a ground wire extending lengthwise through the bypass cable, each signal conductor and ground wire having opposing proximal and distal free ends; distal free ends of the signal conductors and ground wires being terminated to the host device external connector interfaces, and proximal free ends of the signal conductors and ground wires to a chip package connector that is matable with the chip package substrate contacts; and, the chip package connector including a connector housing supporting a pair of conductive signal terminals extending lengthwise through the connector housing and aligned with a longitudinal axis of the connector housing, the signal terminals including tail portions to which the proximal free ends of the bypass cable signal conductors and ground wires are terminated, the signal terminals further including contact portions with contact surfaces offset from the connector housing longitudinal axis; the connector housing further including a shield supported therein to at least partially encircle portions of the signal terminals proximate to the signal terminal contact portions, the shield including a pair of ground terminals extending therefrom and out of the connector housing, the ground terminals further including contact portions with contact surfaces offset from the connector housing longitudinal axis, the signal and ground terminals being aligned so that when a mating face of the connector is pushed against a common mating surface of the chip package substrate, the contact portions move outwardly along the circuit board mating surface to provide a linear wiping action along the chip package substrate common mating surface.
15. The bypass cable assembly of claim 14, wherein the signal and ground terminals have a first width and the contact portions thereof have a second width which is greater than the first width.
16. The bypass cable assembly of claim 14, further including a connector block configured for mounting to the chip package substrate common mating surface, the connector block including at least one opening configured to receive the connector housing therein.
17. The bypass cable assembly of claim 16, wherein the connector block includes at least one stop surface in opposition to the circuit board mating surface and the connector housing includes at least one engagement shoulder disposed in opposition to the connector block one stop surface, the one stop surface and engagement shoulder cooperating to maintain the connector housing signal and ground terminal contact portions in contact with the chip package substrate common mating surface.
18. The bypass cable assembly of claim 14, wherein the signal terminal contact portions are arranged in a first row and the ground terminal contact portions are arranged in a second row along the connector housing mating face.
19. The bypass cable assembly of claim 18, wherein one of the signal terminal contact portions and one of the ground terminal contact portions are arranged in a third row that intersects the first and second rows.
20. The bypass cable assembly of claim 19, wherein the other of the signal terminal contact portions and the other of the ground terminal contact portions are arranged in a fourth row that intersects the first and second rows, the third and fourth rows being spaced apart.
21. The bypass cable assembly of claim 14, further including additional bypass cables which include pairs of signal conductors extending lengthwise therethrough, and individual ground wires associated with each additional bypass cable wire pair, the signal and ground wires having opposing first and second free ends; distal free ends of the signal and ground wires of the additional bypass cables being terminated to the external connector interfaces, and each of the additional bypass cables having additional chip package connectors terminated to proximal free ends of their respective signal and ground wires; the additional chip package connectors including connector housings supporting pairs of conductive signal terminals extending lengthwise therethrough, aligned with longitudinal axis of respective ones of the connector housings, the signal terminals including contact portions with contact surfaces offset from the longitudinal axes of the additional connector housings; the additional connector housings including shields which at least partially encircle portions of pairs of the signal terminals proximate to the contact portions of the signal terminals, the shields including pairs of ground terminals extending from the additional connector housings with contact portions having contact surfaces offset from respective additional connector housing longitudinal axes, the signal and ground terminal contact portions being configured to move in a linear wiping action along the chip package substrate common mating surface when mating faces of the additional connector housings are pushed thereagainst in directions normal to the wiping action.
22. A bypass cable assembly for connecting circuits of a chip package to an external connector interfaces of a host device, comprising: a chip package including a substrate supporting at least one integrated circuit, the substrate including circuitry extending between the integrated circuit and contacts on the chip package substrate, the chip package substrate including a plurality of receptacles disposed thereon and aligned with the chip package substrate contacts; a plurality of bypass cables, each bypass cable including a pair of signal conductors surrounded by a dielectric body, the signal conductors being spaced apart from each other in a first spacing within the bypass cable body, and a ground wire associated with each pair of signal conductors, each of the signal conductors and ground wire having opposing first and second free ends; distal ends of the signal conductors and ground wires being connected to the host device external connector interfaces; proximal ends of the signal conductors and ground wires being connected to board connectors matable with the chip package substrate contacts and configured to engage the chip package receptacles, each of the board connectors including a housing and a compliant member supported within the housing, a pair of conductive signal terminals extending lengthwise in the housing, the signal terminals including contact portions extending at least partially out of the housing, the signal terminal contact portions being aligned together in opposition to the chip package contacts and further deflectably supported by the compliant member; and, wherein each housing includes a ground shield that at least partially encircles portions of the signal terminals proximate to said signal terminal contact portions, the ground shield including a pair of ground terminals extending therefrom out of said connector housing, the ground terminals further including contact portions with contact surfaces aligned with the signal terminal contact surfaces.
23. The bypass cable assembly of claim 22, wherein the housing has at least four sides and the ground shield has at least three sides.
24. The bypass cable assembly of claim 22, wherein each chip package receptacle includes at least one opening surrounding the chip package contacts, the opening including a rear wall with a conductive surface which is contacted by the connector ground terminal contact portions when the board connector is fully inserted into the one opening.
25. The bypass cable assembly of claim 24, wherein the chip package receptacle opening includes a flexible latching arm that engages the housing, the latching arm being cantilevered from the chip package receptacle so as to exert a downward contact pressure on the housing to maintain the housing signal conductor and ground terminal contact portions in contact with the chip package contacts.
26. The bypass cable assembly of claim 22, wherein the signal terminal contact portions are arranged in a first row and the ground terminal contact portions are arranged in a second row along a mating face of the board connector, the first and second rows being spaced apart such that single signal terminal contact portions are aligned with corresponding single ground terminal contact portions.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) The organization and manner of the structure and operation of the Present Disclosure, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may be understood by reference to the following Detailed Description, taken in connection with the accompanying Figures, wherein like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(34) While the Present Disclosure may be susceptible to embodiment in different forms, there is shown in the Figures, and will be described herein in detail, specific embodiments, with the understanding that the Present Disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the principles of the Present Disclosure, and is not intended to limit the Present Disclosure to that as illustrated.
(35) As such, references to a feature or aspect are intended to describe a feature or aspect of an example of the Present Disclosure, not to imply that every embodiment thereof must have the described feature or aspect. Furthermore, it should be noted that the description illustrates a number of features. While certain features have been combined together to illustrate potential system designs, those features may also be used in other combinations not expressly disclosed. Thus, the depicted combinations are not intended to be limiting, unless otherwise noted.
(36) In the embodiments illustrated in the Figures, representations of directions such as up, down, left, right, front and rear, used for explaining the structure and movement of the various elements of the Present Disclosure, are not absolute, but relative. These representations are appropriate when the elements are in the position shown in the Figures. If the description of the position of the elements changes, however, these representations are to be changed accordingly.
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(39) FR4 circuit board material becomes increasing lossy and at frequencies above 10 Ghz this starts to become problematic. Additionally, turns, bends and crossovers of these signal transmission line traces 52a-c are usually required to route the transmission line from the chip package contacts 49 to connectors or other components mounted on the motherboard 52-2. These directional changes in the traces 52a-c can create signal reflection and noise problems as well as additional losses. Losses can sometimes be corrected by the use of amplifiers, repeaters and equalizers but these elements also increase the cost of manufacturing the final circuit board 52-2. This complicates the layout of the circuit hoard 52-2 because additional board space will be needed to accommodate such amplifiers and repeaters and this additional board space may not be available in the intended size of the device. Custom materials for circuit boards are available that reduce such losses, but the prices of these materials severely increase the cost of the circuit hoard and, consequently, the electronic devices in which they are used. Still further, lengthy circuit traces require increased power to drive high speed signals through them and, as such, they hamper efforts by designers to develop green (energy-saving) devices.
(40) In order to overcome these disadvantages, we have developed bypass cable assemblies that take the signal transmission lines off of the circuit board to eliminate the need to use expensive, custom board materials for circuit boards, as well as largely eliminated the problem of losses in FR4 material.
(41) Preferably, these termination areas 54-3 are disposed proximate to, or at edges 54-4 of the chip package 54, as shown in
(42) Bypass cables 80 are utilized to connect circuits of the chip package 54 at the cable proximal ends to external connector interfaces and circuits on a circuit board at the cable distal ends. The bypass cables 80 are shown terminated at their proximal ends 87 to the package contact pads 54-2. As shown in
(43) As noted, the bypass cables 80 have opposing proximal ends 87 and distal ends 88 that are respectively connected to the chip package 54 and to distal connectors. The distal connectors may include I/O connectors 90 as illustrated in
(44) The bypass cables 80 define a plurality of individual, high speed signal transmission lines that bypass traces on the motherboard 62 and the aforementioned related disadvantages. The bypass cables 80 are able to maintain the ordered geometry of the signal conductors 81 throughout the length of the cables 80 from the contacts, or termination points 54-2, 54-3, on the chip package 54 to the distal connectors 90, 93 and because this geometry remains relatively ordered, the bypass cables 80 may easily be turned, bent or crossed in their paths without introducing problematic signal reflection or impedance discontinuities into the signal transmission lines. The cables 80 are shown as arranged in first and second sets of cables wherein a first set of bypass cables extends between the chip package 54 and the I/O connectors 90 in the ports 60 in the front wall 56 of the device 50. A second set of bypass cables is shown in
(45) The board connectors 100 of the present disclosure mate with receptacle connectors 98, as illustrated in
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(47) As depicted, the signal terminals 102 have contact portions 104 that extend outwardly from a mating end 106 of the connector 100. The signal terminal tail portions 103 and contact portions 104 are interconnected together by intervening signal terminal body portions 105. The signal terminal contact portions 104 can be seen to have generally J-shaped configurations when viewed from the side, as in
(48) The contact surfaces 107 have general U-shaped or C-shaped configurations, and they ride upon the chip package substrate contacts 54-2 when the connectors 100 are inserted into their corresponding receptacles 98 and into contact with the mating surface 64 of the chip package substrate 53 by at least a point contact along the width of the contacts 54-2. Although arcuate contact surfaces are shown in the illustrated embodiments, other configurations may work provided that a suitable connection is maintained against the contacts 54-2. In an embodiment other configurations will includes at least a linear point contact with the contacts 54-2. The depicted arcuate surfaces include this type of contact and thereby provide a reliable wiping action. The curved contact surfaces of the connector terminals are also partially compliant and therefore absorb stack-up tolerances that may occur between the receptacle connectors 98 and the chip package substrate 53 to which they are mounted.
(49) The connector 100, as shown in
(50) The ground shield 110 is also shown as having a pair of spaced-apart ground terminals 112 extending longitudinally therefrom along one side edge 110a of the ground shield 110. These ground terminals 112 project past the mating end 106 of the connector 100 and include body portions 112a, and J-shaped contact portions 113 with arcuate contact surfaces 114 that extend transversely to the connector axis LA as well as longitudinal axes of the ground terminals 110. As illustrated in
(51) An insulative connector housing 116 having two interengaging halves 116a, 116b is shown in
(52) As noted earlier, the signal and ground terminal contact portions 104, 113 have general J-shaped configurations. Preferably, this J-shape is in the nature of a compound curve that combines two different radius curves, as is known in the art (
(53) Such connectors 100 may be inserted into the openings 99a of the receptacle connectors 98 and held in place vertically in pressure engagement against the circuit board mating surface 64. In the embodiment illustrated in
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(55) The contact surfaces 213 have general U-shaped or C-shaped configurations, and they can ride upon the substrate contacts 54-2 when the connectors 200 are inserted into corresponding vertical openings 99a so as to contact the mating surface 64 of the substrate 53 in at least a point contact along the contacts 54-2. Although arcuate contact surfaces 213 of the connector terminals are shown in the illustrated embodiments, other configurations may work, provided that a least a linear point contact is maintained against the substrate contacts 54-2. In the illustrated embodiments, the free ends 206 of the signal conductors 81 are folded or bent back upon themselves as illustrated, as at 209, and in doing so, extend around a compliant member 215 with a cylindrical body portion 216 that is disposed widthwise within the connector body 202. The compliant member 215 is preferably formed from a elastomeric material with a durometer value chosen to accommodate the desired spring force for the contact portions 212. The compliant member 215 is shown as having a cylindrical configuration, but it will be understood that other configurations, such as square, rectangular, elliptical or the like may be used. The signal conductor free ends are bent such that they define an opening, or loop, 208 through which the complaint member 215 extends in the connector body 202 and the free ends 206 extend around at least more than half of the circumference of the compliant member body portion 216 in order to retain the compliant member 215 in place. Although the free ends 206 are shown folded back upon themselves, they could terminate earlier to define a J-shaped hook that engages the compliant member body portion 216 in a manner that prevents the compliant member 215 from working free from its engagement with the contact portions 212.
(56) In the connector 200 of
(57) Such connectors 200 may be inserted into the openings 99a of the receptacle connectors 98 and held in place vertically in pressure engagement against the circuit board mating surface. This pressure may be applied by way of a press arm or angled walls of the receptacle openings 99a. Receptacle connectors 98 that receive connectors 200 in a vertical direction are shown in
(58) In order to accommodate these type wire to board connectors 200, a horizontal receptacle connector 240 such as illustrated in
(59) In order to apply a downward contact pressure on the signal terminal contact portions a cantilevered press arm, or latch 246, is shown formed as part of the connector 240. It extends forwardly within the opening 243 from a rear wall 244 thereof and terminates in a free end 247 that is manipulatable. It further preferably has a configuration that is complementary to that of one of the ground shield walls 222, as shown in
(60) The receptacle connector 240 may further include in its openings 243, side rails 249 that extend lengthwise within the opening 243 along the mating surface of the circuit board 62. These rails 249 engage and support edges of the connector body 202 above the circuit board a desired distance that produces a reliable spring force against the contact portions 212 of the signal terminals 210 by the compliant member 215. It will be noted that the signal terminal contact portions 212 of the connector 200 make contact with their corresponding contact pads 64 in a horizontal direction, while the ground terminal contact portions 229 of the ground terminals 228 make contact ground circuits on the circuit board 62 in a vertical direction by virtue of their contact e vertical conductive surface 230 of the connector 240.
(61) The Present Disclosure provides connectors that will preserve an ordered geometry through the termination to the circuit board that is present in the cable wires without the introduction of excessive noise and/or crosstalk and which will provide a wiping action on the contact pads to which they connect. The use of such bypass cable assemblies, permits the high speed data transmission in association with circuit boards made with inexpensive materials, such as FR4, thereby lowering the cost and manufacturing complexity of certain electronic devices. The direct manner of connection between the cable conductors and the circuit board eliminates the use of separate terminals which consequently reduces the likelihood of discontinuities, leading to better signal performance. This elimination of separate contacts also leads to an overall reduction in the system cost. Additionally, the compressibility of the compliant member 215 will ensure contact between at least the signal terminals and the circuit board contacts irrespective of areas of the circuit board which may be out of planar tolerance. It also permits the signal contact portions 212 to move slightly against the compliant member 215 to achieve a reliable spring force against the substrate contacts.
(62) While preferred embodiments of the Present Disclosure have been shown and described, it is envisioned that those skilled in the art may devise various modifications without departing from the spirit and scope of the foregoing Description and the appended Claims.