BATTERY INTERFACE FOR AN ELECTRICAL DEVICE
20220352666 · 2022-11-03
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01R13/111
ELECTRICITY
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01R13/20
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/052
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
An interface (30) between a battery and an electrical device, the interface (30) comprising: a male terminal (24) and a female terminal (26) configured to receive the male terminal (24); the female terminal (26) having a female contact (36) of conductive material and the male terminal (24) having a male contact (32) of conductive material; wherein, at least one of the female contact (36) and the male contact (32) are resiliently deformable such that insertion of the male terminal (24) in the female terminal (26) provides an area (40) of face to face contact in which the male contact (32) and the female contact (36) conform to each other.
Claims
1. An interface between a battery and an electrical device, the interface comprising: a male terminal; and, a female terminal configured to receive the male terminal, the female terminal having a female contact of conductive material and the male terminal having a male contact of conductive material; wherein, at least one of the female contact and the male contact are resiliently deformable such that insertion of the male terminal in the female terminal provides an area of face to face contact in which the male contact and the female contact conform to each other.
2. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein the female terminal has a recess for receiving the male terminal, and the female contact has resiliently deformable portions on at least two opposing sides of the recess.
3. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 2 wherein, the male terminal has a casing with an opening through which the male contact extends, the male contact mounted in the casing for movement within the opening.
4. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 3 wherein, the opening is planar and the movement is a direction parallel to the plane of the opening.
5. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 4 wherein the male contact is fixed in a direction normal to the plane of the opening.
6. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein the resiliently deformable portions of the female contact bow inwardly into the recess prior to insertion of the male terminal.
7. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein the male contact of the male terminal is cylindrical.
8. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 6 wherein the female contact is provided by resiliently deformable strips compressively held within the recess such that the strips bow inwardly.
9. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 8 wherein, the strips are elongate and extend in a direction of insertion and withdrawal of the male terminal.
10. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 9 wherein, the strips extend from an integrally formed transverse member, such that the strips are spaced along an edge of the transverse member to form a comb structure.
11. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 9 wherein the resiliently deformable strips extend between two spaced apart transverse members to form a ladder structure.
12. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 10 wherein, the recess has two of the comb structures, such that the transverse member of each of the comb structures are spaced apart and the strips from each of the comb structures are interleaved with each other.
13. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 12 wherein, the transverse member of the comb structure is shaped such that the strips are positioned circumferentially around the male terminal.
14. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 13 wherein, the transverse member is formed into an enclosed ring such that the strips bow radially inwards and the male contact has a circular cross section smaller than the internal diameter of the ring.
15. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 14 wherein, the male contact of the male terminal is cylindrical.
16. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 8 wherein, the strips include copper, silver or a conductive alloy.
17. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein, during use, an electrical current flow between the battery and the device, is between 40 amps to 400 amps.
18. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according claim 1 wherein, the male contact has a cross section transverse to the direction of insertion with a minimum dimension between 3 mm to 20 mm.
19. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein, the insertion force of the male terminal into the female terminal is between 5 Newtons to 50 Newtons.
20. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein the removal force to disengage the male terminal and the female terminal is between 2 Newtons to 30 Newtons.
21. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1 wherein the battery includes the female terminal.
22. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 1, further comprising a spade or pin type male contact and matching female contact for transmitting an electrical data signal.
23. An interface between a battery and an electrical device according to claim 22 wherein the data signal is indicative of one or more of the following: battery charge level, battery temperature, and remaining operating time.
24. An electrical device with a battery interface according to claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029] Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
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[0038]
[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0040]
[0041] The male contacts 14 are simple spade terminals in which the flat spade contact wedges the arms 16 and 18 apart when inserted into the female contacts 12. The electrical connection between the male contacts 14 and the female contacts 12 is only along the bend lines 20. These “lines” of contact provide very little surface area connection between the two contacts. The small area of connection can cause electrical resistance particularly when the electrical interface is in a circuit for a relatively high current. For example, batteries powering a DC motor for a large device such as a lawn mower will require a relatively high current (e.g. more than 40 amps) in which case, the electrical resistance caused by the thin lines of contact 20 between the male and female terminal 2 and 10 is detrimental to the overall efficiency of the device. This in turn reduces the operating time before the battery needs replacement or recharging.
[0042] For devices such as leaf blowers, stick vacuums and so on the normal “run time” should be long enough to allow the user to complete a routine or typical task before needing to recharge the battery. Similarly, the battery should not be overly large to ensure that the handheld device is not impractically heavy during use.
[0043] With these issues in mind there is an ongoing imperative to minimise the electrical losses at the electrical interface between a plug-in battery and an electrically driven device. As shown in
[0044] As shown in
[0045]
[0046] The bowed female contact may be formed in other ways. For example, it can be provided as a single, integrally formed comb structure, or a ladder structure with transverse elements extending along both sides of the adjacent strips. It may also be provided by multiple pieces of cooperating elements, or any other structures providing suitable resilience.
[0047] As shown in
[0048] Insertion of the male contact 58 into the socket 34 in the direction of insertion 28 compresses the resiliently deformable strips 60 such that they conform to the internal surface of the female contact 56 to provide the face to face contact area 40 (not shown).
[0049]
[0050] Embodiments of the electrical connection may have additional male contacts in the form of flat spade terminals or circular cross-section pins for transmitting data indicative of an operating status or parameter of the device or battery. For example, the data may be indicative of the current battery charge level, the battery temperature, the device temperature and/or the remaining operating time.
[0051] The electrical interfaces described herein are well suited for use at the connection between a plug-in rechargeable battery and the DC motor of a device that draws a relatively high current such as a battery powered lawn mower.
[0052] Structurally, the Applicant's development of these products has shown that the minimum dimension of the cross section of the male contact transverse to the direction of insertion 28 should be in the range of 3 mm to 20 mm, or preferably the male contact has a cross section transverse to the direction of insertion with a minimum dimension between 8 mm to 12 mm.
[0053] For example, if the male contact is a cylindrical pin such as that shown in
[0054] When removing the male terminal from the female terminal, the extraction force should be in the range of 2 Newtons to 30 Newtons such that the battery is retained on the device during normal operation but not impractical for a user to manually remove, or preferably between 12 Newtons to 20 Newtons.
[0055] As the sophistication of the devices described above improves, there is an increasing call for a data communication terminal at the electrical interface in addition to the high current male and female terminals. The data terminal may transmit a signal indicative of battery charge levels, battery temperature, device temperature, remaining operating time or other information to a user display on the device. The data terminal may be provided by a conventional blade or pin terminal and socket given the current levels are far lower and electrical resistance is not a significant issue.
[0056] The present invention has been described herein by way of example only. Skilled workers in this field will readily appreciate and recognize many variations and modifications which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the broad inventive concept.