[0001] The present invention relates to an electrical connector according to the preamble
of claim 1.
[0002] In such an electrical connector, which is known from EP 0 964 478 A2, the contacts
of which make contact in a solderless manner with the relevant contact surfaces of
the two electrical components, the contacts, which are profiled in longitudinal section
and clamped at an end region in the insulating body, are bent back in the manner of
a horizontal U at their free end, which projects from the insulating body. The one
contact point, which contacts the electrical component on which the insulating body
is held mechanically, protrudes after the clamped region from the base of the insulating
body. In said case, said contact point projects in a spring-elastic manner beyond
the base surface of the insulating body. The contact point, which is to make contact
with the other opposite electrical component, is provided on the outermost end of
the bent-back part of the free end region. The part of the free end region lying opposite
the bent-back part extends at a slight distance above the one electrical component
and is substantially fixed, wherein the forces acting upon the contact point of the
bent-back part have to be taken up upon contacting of the other electrical component.
[0003] The drawback here is the relatively large overall length and the relatively elaborate
shaping of the contacts because the long part lying opposite the bent-back, free and
resiliently movable part of the contact has to be of a relatively stable construction.
A further drawback is that the insulating body has to be mechanically fastened in
a stable manner to the one electrical component in order to take up the spring force
of the other contact point of the contact acting upon the electrical component.
[0004] The object of the present invention is to provide an electrical connector of the
type described initially, which is of a more advantageous design in terms of both
the overall length and the constructional outlay and yet guarantees good contact making.
[0005] To achieve said object, in an electrical connector of the described type the features
indicated in claim 1 are provided.
[0006] By virtue of the features according to the invention short contacts are achieved,
which lead to a shorter overall length of the entire electrical connector. A further
important advantage is that the two contact points are disposed on the free and freely
movable end region of the contact and have a mutually positive influence upon one
another during contacting and also in terms of contact quality. As a result of pressure
upon the outer contact point, the contact pressure of the inner contact point upon
the associated contact surface of the relevant component is simultaneously increased.
This leads to an identical contact quality of both contacting points.
[0007] An adaptation of the desired contact pressure is achieved through selection of the
relevant distances in accordance with the features of claim 2.
[0008] According to the features of claim 3 and/or the features of claim 4, different preconditions
may be set for achieving the contacting at both contact points. In the former case,
contacting of the inner contact surface by the electrical component, to which the
insulating body is mechanically fastened, is achieved immediately with the said assembly,
while in the latter case the contacting between the inner contact point and the electrical
component, on which the insulating body is held, does not occur until after the contacting
between the outer contact point and the other electrical component has been effected
(so-called zero-force insertion). This has the advantage of reducing the risk of static
discharges during handling because, without the other electrical component lying thereon,
there is no electrical connection between the inner contact point and the relevant
contact surface on the one electrical component.
[0009] The features according to claim 5 achieve a constructionally simple solution to the
problem of guaranteeing that, when the other electrical component contacts the outer
contact point, the free end region of the contact projecting out of the insulating
body moves resiliently close to its point of clamping in the insulating body and not
in the region of the inner contact point. In said case, in order to intensify said
effect the features according to claim 6 are expediently provided.
[0010] According to the features of claim 7 and the features of claim 8, two different refinements
of the insulating body including the clamping-action mounting of the contacts are
provided. In the latter case the electrical connector may, according to the features
of claim 9 and/or 10, be refined to the effect that further contact points are provided.
According to the features of claim 9, in addition to the component-to-component connection,
the possibility of an input/output connection via the end of the insulating body,
e.g. for testing purposes or in the case of mobile phones contacting a charging or
hands-free talking device, may be achieved. In the case of the features according
to claim 10, an electrical connection to the other side of the relevant electrical
component is alternatively or additionally achieved, with the result that it is also
possible to realise switching functions, by means of which the presence of said electrical
component is recognised. This may be effected without an additional plated-through
hole in the one component. Furthermore, by virtue of said construction an increase
of the mechanical stability of the electrical connector is achieved.
[0011] When, given the last-mentioned U-shaped refinement of the extension portions of the
clamped region of the contacts, the features according to claim 11 are provided, an
active gripping of the relevant electrical component inside the insulating body is
achieved. When in said case the features according to claim 12 are provided, foil-like
or other thin electrical components may then also be clamped and/or gripped in the
insulating body.
[0012] Further details of the invention arise from the following detailed description of
embodiments of the invention, which are illustrated in the drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a diagrammatic plan view of two electrical components which are to be electrically
connected to one another by an electrical connector according to a first embodiment
of the present invention,
Fig. 2 is an enlarged broken-off sectional view along the line II-II of Fig. 1,
Fig. 3 is a section corresponding to Fig. 2 but in the assembled and electrically
connected state of the two electrical components,
Fig. 4 is an enlarged longitudinal section through an electrical connector according
to a second embodiment of the present invention prior to the electrically connecting
assembly of the two electrical components and
Fig. 5A and 5B is a front view and plan view respectively of the electrical connector
according to Fig. 4 without the two electrical components.
[0013] The electrical connector 10 or 110 illustrated in the drawings is used to electrically
connect two electrical components 11 and 12 or 111 and 112, which may be, for example,
a printed-circuit board, an LCD arrangement, a mobile phone housing or the like. In
said case, the electrical connection between the two components 11 and 12 or 111 and
112 is effected by means of the connector 10 or 110 in a solderless manner purely
through contact surface contact. The electrical connector 10, 110 substantially comprises
a suitably shaped insulating body 13 or 113 and a plurality of contacts 14 or 114
disposed alongside one another and clamped and/or held in the insulating body 13 or
113. Each contact 14, 114 is connectable in an electrically contacting manner by its
free and freely movable end region 19, 119, which projects out of the insulating body
13, 113, to a contact surface 16, 116 of the one electrical component 11, 111 as well
as to a contact surface 17, 117, parallel thereto, of the other electrical component
12, 112.
[0014] According to the first embodiment illustrated in Figs. 1 to 3, the insulating body
13 is in plan view (Fig. 1) substantially U-shaped and in side view rectangular, wherein
the longitudinal section according to Fig. 2 shows an L-shaped back wall 21 lying
at the side and a front threshold 22 resting on the electrical component 11. In a
manner which is not illustrated, the insulating body 13 is mechanically fastened to
the electrical component 11, e.g. a printed-circuit board. By virtue of its constructional
refinement, the insulating body 13 is used to receive and guide the front end region
23 of the other electrical component 12, e.g. a printed-board connector or an LCD
unit.
[0015] Each contact 14 is held clamped at its one end 26 in the insulating body 13. In said
case, the clamping region of the insulating body 13 for the contact 14 lies close
to the supporting face 24 of the insulating body 13 on the surface 27 of the one electrical
component 11. Said surface 27 is equipped opposite the free end region 19 of the individual
contacts 14 with, in each case, the contact surface 16.
[0016] The contact 14 held in the insulating body has, in the axial extension of its free
end region 19 which terminates just in front of the threshold 22, a first inner contact
point 31 and, disposed at a distance from the latter, a second outer contact point
32. The contact 14, viewed in cross section, is profiled in such a way that the inner
contact point 31 and the outer contact point 32 are disposed in different, i.e. spaced-apart,
parallel planes. Whereas the inner contact point 31 is situated in a plane, which
lies approximately in the plane of the clamped end 26 of the contact 14 and in the
non-assembled state of the electrical components 11 and 12 is situated at a slight
distance above the contact surface 16 of the electrical component 11, the plane of
the outer contact point 32 in the non-assembled state according to Fig. 2 lies at
a distance therefrom and above the top guide surface of the threshold 27, i.e. the
outer contact point 32 protrudes into the insertion opening 34 for the other electrical
component 12. The inner contact point 31 of the contact 14 is defined at the bending
point between clamped end 26 and outer contact point 32, lying opposite the surface
27 of the one electrical component 11, and the outer contact point 32 is formed diametrically
remote from the inner contact point 31 by a curvature of the outermost free end of
the contact 14. It is self-evident that the free end edge 33 of the contact 14 after
the curved outer contact point 32 is situated below the plane of the top of the threshold
22.
[0017] When the other electrical component 12 according to Fig. 3 is introduced into the
insertion opening 34 of the insulating body 13, the outer contact point 32 is moved
down in the direction of the arrow A, i.e. towards the one electrical component 11,
while at the same time on account of the spring-elastic clamping of the contact 14
in the insulating body 13 the inner contact point 31 is moved to the same extent in
the direction of the arrow A' towards the surface 27 and hence towards the corresponding
contact surface 16 of the electrical component 11 until the inner contact point 31
contacts the contact surface 28 with a specific contact pressure. Said contact pressure
is dependent upon the elastic stiffness of the free end region 19 of the contact 14
and upon the distance, over which the outer contact point 32 has been moved by the
other electrical component 12 in the direction of the arrow A. In other words, the
contact pressure of the two contact points 31 and 32 on the relevant mating contact
surfaces 16 and 17 is in both cases substantially approximately identical.
[0018] To achieve said elastic and, in terms of the two contact points 31 and 32, identical
and uniform movements, according to Fig. 1 (and Fig. 5B) each contact 14 in plan view
is designed in the shape of a double trapezium. In other words, the portion 36 adjacent
to the clamped end 26 extends up to the inner contact point 31 and the following portion
37 extends between the two contact points 31 and 32 in each case trapezoidally, wherein
the two trapeziums at their in each case larger base sides are integral with one another
at the inner contact point 31. In said case, the longitudinal extension of the portion
37 is greater than that of the portion 36 so that the region of the contact 14 at
the outer contact point 32 is narrower than the remote region which merges integrally
into the clamped end 26. This gives rise to a relative stiffness of the contact 14
in the region of the inner contact point 31, with the result that no swivelling axis
is formed there.
[0019] According to a non-illustrated variant of said first embodiment, the contact 14 in
the region after the clamped end 26 in the insulating body 13 is profiled in such
a way that the inner contact point 31 already in the non-assembled state of the other
electrical component 12 makes contact with the contact surface 28 of the one electrical
component 11. With insertion of the other electrical component 12 into the insulating
body 13 the outer contact point 32 of the contact 14 is admittedly likewise moved
downwards in the direction of the arrow A but this results not in further movement
of the inner contact point 31 but exclusively in an intensification of the contact
pressure between inner contact point 31 and contact surface 28.
[0020] The electrical connector 119 illustrated in Figs. 4 and 5 has an insulating body
113, which in section has the shape of a U lying on its side and integrally composed
of an upper shorter limb 141, a back limb 142 and a lower longer limb 143. A receiver
144 for the one electrical component 111 is therefore formed between the two limbs
141 and 143 and, depending on the thickness of the electrical component 111, takes
the form of a groove or slot. The former is the case when the electrical component
111 is formed by a printed-circuit board or an LCD plate, while the latter is the
case when the electrical component 111 is a foil or the like, which is provided with
contact surfaces.
[0021] The contacts 114, which are held clamped in the insulating body 113, at their free
and freely movable end region 119 projecting from the insulating body 113 have substantially
the same shape as the contacts 14 according to Figs. 1 to 3, the sole difference being
that the inner contact point 131 is likewise formed by a curvature because the inner
portion 136 extends obliquely up towards the clamped end 126. The clamped end 126
of the contact 114 is situated in the upper limb 141 of the insulating body 113.
[0022] The clamped end 126 extends by means of a first extension 146 of the contact 114
further towards the back end 145 of the insulating body 113. Said first extension
146 is disposed in such a way that its outer surface projects beyond the end 145 and
hence forms a contact region 147. Thus, the insulating body 113 via said end 145 may
offer an input/output connection e.g. for contacting a charging device or hands-free
talking device for mobile phones.
[0023] In the embodiment of Fig. 4, the first extension portion 146 extending at right angles
to the clamped region 126 merges into a second extension portion 148, which in turn
extends at right angles thereto and parallel to the clamped end 126. The second extension
portion 148 inside the lower limb 143 of the insulating body 113 has a contact end
149, which overreaches the surface of the lower limb 43 and may come into contacting
connection with a lower contact surface (not shown in detail) of the one electrical
component 111. In a variant of said embodiment, the contact end 149 is provided with
a spring region, which rises above the inner surface of the lower limb 143, for receiving
and gripping the edge region of the one electrical component 111 in the receiver 144.
[0024] According to Fig. 4, when the electrical component 111 has been introduced into the
receiver 144 of the insulating body 13 and the other electrical component 112 has
not yet been assembled, the free end region 119 of the contact 114 is preset in the
manner described with reference to Fig. 2, i.e. the inner contact point 131 is disposed
at a distance above the contact surface 116 of the one electrical component 111. In
said case, in the embodiment of Fig. 4 it is simultaneously provided that the inner
contact point 131 is disposed approximately opposite the contact end 149 of the second
extension portion 148 in the lower limb 143 of the insulating body 113. When the other
electrical component 112 is moved in the direction of the arrow A according to Fig.
4 towards the one electrical component 111 for contacting the contact and/or contacts
114, the inner contact point 131 of the contacts 114 also contacts the relevant contact
surfaces 116 of the one electrical component 111. The resultant effects were described
with reference to the embodiment of Figs. 1 to 3. It goes without saying that the
other electrical component 112 is held in a suitable manner in its contacting position.
[0025] Figs. 5A and 5B illustrate the profiling of the contacts 114, the double-trapezium-like
shape of which was described with reference to the first embodiment according to Figs.
1 to 3. Accordingly, in Figs. 5A and 5B corresponding reference characters 136, 137
etc. are used for the trapezium portions etc.
[0026] According to non-illustrated variants of said second embodiment, the second extension
portion 148 and optionally also the first extension portion 146 are omitted from the
contact 114. A further variant is such that the two extension portions 146 and 148
are provided not for contacting purposes but merely to increase the stiffness of the
insulating body 113.
[0027] In the case of said second embodiment also, a variant may be such that the contact
114 in its region on the other side of the clamped end 126 is profiled and/or bent
down in such a way that the inner contact point 131 contacts the contact surface 116
on the one electrical component 111 as soon as the latter is accommodated in the receiver
144 of the insulating body 113.
1. Electrical connector (10, 110) for two electrical components (11, 12; 111, 112) having
contact surfaces (16, 17; 116, 117), which in the assembled state lie opposite one
another and preferably extend parallel to one another, comprising an insulating body
(13, 113) equipped with a plurality of contacts (14, 114), which are held at a distance
alongside one another and profiled in longitudinal section, and mechanically connectable
to one of the electrical components (11, 12; 111, 112), characterised in that each contact (14, 114) at its free and freely movable end region (19, 119) projecting
out of the insulating body (13, 113) is provided with two oppositely directed contact
points (31, 32; 131, 132), which are spaced apart in axial contact direction and disposed
in mutually offset planes, for the contact surfaces of the two electrical components.
2. Connector according to claim 1, characterised in that the distance between the planes of the contact points (31, 32; 131, 132) in the non-assembled
state of the electrical components (11, 12; 111, 112) is greater than the distance
between the contact surfaces (16, 17; 116, 117) of the electrical components in the
assembled state.
3. Connector according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the plane of the inner contact point (31, 131) in the non-assembled state lies at
least in the plane of the associated contact surface (16, 116) of the electrical component
holding the insulating body (13, 113).
4. Connector according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the plane of the inner contact (31, 131) in the non-assembled state lies at a distance
from the plane of the associated contact surface (29, 129) of the electrical component
holding the insulating body (13, 113) and the inner contact point (31, 131) is movable
with a movement of the outer contact point (32, 132).
5. Connector according to at least one of the preceding claims, characterised in that the contact (14, 114) in plan view has an area, which is formed by two trapezoidal
shapes (36, 37; 136, 137) joined together at their longer base sides, wherein the
inner contact points (31, 131) are disposed in the longer base side.
6. Connector according to claim 5, characterised in that the axial distance between the outer and the inner contact point (31, 32; 131, 132)
is greater than the axial distance of the inner contact point (31, 131) from the clamped
region (26, 126) in the insulating body (13, 113).
7. Connector according to at least one of claims 1 to 6, characterised in that the insulating body (13) is of a strip-like construction and is held mechanically
on the one electrical component (11) and at its end facing the one electrical component
(11) holds the contacts (114) in a clamped manner.
8. Connector according to at least one of claims 1 to 6, characterised in that the insulating body (113) has a, viewed in cross section, horizontal U-shape, in
the slot or groove (144) of which one of the electrical elements (111, 112) is accommodated
in a mechanically fixed manner, and that the contacts (114) are held clamped in the
insulating body (113) in the region of the top of the one electrical component (111,
112).
9. Connector according to claim 8, characterised in that the clamped region (126) of the contacts (114) in the insulating body (113) has a
first extension portion (136), which overlaps the rear end face (145) of the insulating
body (113).
10. Connector according to claim 8 or 9, characterised in that the clamped region (126) of the contacts (114) in the insulating body (113) has a
second extension portion (148), which extends up to a surface region of the lower
limb (143) lying opposite the contact clamping limb (141) of the insulating body (113).
11. Connector according to claim 10, characterised in that the second extension portion (148) of the contact (114) rises above the surface region
of the lower limb (143) of the insulating body (113) by means of a resilient part.
12. Connector according to claim 10 or 11, characterised in that the part of the second extension portion (148) lying exposed on the surface region
of the lower limb (143) lies opposite the inner contact point (131).