Hybrid power transmission assembly

文档序号:1661990 发布日期:2019-12-27 浏览:36次 中文

阅读说明:本技术 混合电力传输组合件 (Hybrid power transmission assembly ) 是由 J·赫希曼 M·加沃夫斯基 Y·帕克 D·鲁 A·罗斯 R·威尔科克斯 R·希布斯 于 2018-04-03 设计创作,主要内容包括:提供了一种汇流条和连接器组合件。所述汇流条和连接器组合件包含:印刷电路板,其具有附接的连接器,所述连接器被布置成耦合到第一汇流条;和第二汇流条,其耦合到所述连接器。所述汇流条和连接器组合件包含所述连接器,所述连接器被布置成将电流的第一部分从所述第一汇流条分配到所述印刷电路板,并将所述电流的第二部分从所述第一汇流条分配到所述第二汇流条。(A busbar and connector assembly is provided. The bus bar and connector assembly includes: a printed circuit board having an attached connector arranged to couple to a first bus bar; and a second bus bar coupled to the connector. The bus bar and connector assembly includes the connector arranged to distribute a first portion of an electrical current from the first bus bar to the printed circuit board and a second portion of the electrical current from the first bus bar to the second bus bar.)

1. A hybrid power transmission assembly, comprising:

a printed circuit board having an attached connector arranged to couple to a first bus bar;

a second bus bar coupled to the connector, the second bus bar being external to the printed circuit board; and is

The connector is arranged to distribute a first portion of an electrical current from the first bus bar to the printed circuit board and a second portion of the electrical current from the first bus bar to the second bus bar.

2. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the first portion of the current is less than the second portion of the current.

3. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the connector arranged to connect to a first busbar comprises:

the connector has an entire connector tip disposed between the first and third bus bars.

4. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the connector is arranged to float relative to the first busbar.

5. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 1, further comprising:

the connector is arranged to connect to a third bus bar and to a fourth bus bar, wherein the first bus bar and the third bus bar form a balanced power and ground, and the second bus bar and the fourth bus bar further form a balanced power and ground.

6. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 1, wherein:

the grounding is distributed through a plurality of ground planes of the printed circuit board; and is

Power is distributed through the first and second bus bars.

7. The bus bar and connector assembly of claim 1, wherein the printed circuit board comprises electronic circuitry of one or more network switches.

8. A bus bar and connector assembly, comprising:

a first bus bar arranged to propagate a first current;

a printed circuit board;

a second bus bar outside the printed circuit board; and

a connector coupled to the printed circuit board, the first bus bar, and the second bus bar, the connector arranged to transmit a portion of the first current to the printed circuit board and a remaining portion of the first current to the second bus bar.

9. The bus bar and connector assembly of claim 8, wherein the portion of the first current is less than the remaining portion of the first current.

10. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 8, further comprising:

a third bus bar parallel to the first bus bar, wherein an entire connector tip of the connector is located between the first bus bar and the third bus bar.

11. The bus bar and connector assembly of claim 8, wherein the connector is configured to float relative to the first bus bar.

12. The bus bar and connector assembly of claim 8, wherein the connector is coupled to a surface of the printed circuit board by pins extending from a first surface of the connector into holes on the surface of the printed circuit board, and wherein the second bus bar extends from a second surface of the connector and the second bus bar extends along a plane parallel to the surface of the printed circuit board.

13. The busbar and connector assembly of claim 8, wherein:

the printed circuit board is arranged to power at least a first component of a network switch; and is

The second bus bar is arranged to power at least a second component of the network switch.

14. A method of distributing electrical current through a printed circuit board, bus bar and connector assembly, comprising:

passing the current through a first bus bar;

distributing a first portion of the electrical current from the first bus bar to a printed circuit board through a connector; and

distributing a second portion of the electrical current from the first bus bar to a second bus bar through the connector.

15. The method of claim 14, wherein the first portion of the current is less than the second portion of the current.

16. The method of claim 14, wherein the distributing the first and second portions of the current from the first bus bar utilizes an entire connector tip of the connector between the first bus bar and a third bus bar.

17. The method of claim 14, wherein said distributing said first and second portions of said current from said first bus bar through said connector utilizes said connector floating relative to said first bus bar.

18. The method of claim 14, further comprising:

passing a reverse current through a third bus bar;

distributing a third portion of the reverse current from the third bus bar to the printed circuit board through the connector; and

distributing a fourth portion of the reverse current from the third bus bar to a fourth bus bar through the connector, wherein the current and the reverse current, the first portion of the current and the third portion of the reverse current, and the second portion of the current and the fourth portion of the reverse current form a balanced power and ground current.

19. The method of claim 14, further comprising:

distributing a ground through a plurality of ground planes of the printed circuit board; and

distributing power through the first and second bus bars.

20. The method of claim 14, wherein:

the distributing the first portion of the current to the printed circuit board comprises distributing the first portion of the current to a printed circuit board of a network switch; and is

The distributing the second portion of the electrical current to the second bus bar comprises distributing the second portion of the electrical current through the second bus bar to one or more fans arranged to cool the printed circuit board of the network switch.

21. A power transfer apparatus, comprising:

a connector configured to distribute a first portion of a current received from a first bus bar to a printed circuit board and a second portion of the current from the first bus bar to a second bus bar external to the printed circuit board, wherein the connector is configurable such that an amount of the first portion of the current is distributed in a range of no current to less than all of the current.

22. The power transfer apparatus of claim 21, wherein the connector is configured to float relative to the first bus bar.

23. The power transfer apparatus of claim 21, wherein the connector has an entire connector tip arranged to be located between the first and third bus bars.

24. The power transfer apparatus of claim 21, wherein the connector is coupled to a surface of the printed circuit board by pins extending from a first surface of the connector into holes on the surface of the printed circuit board.

Background

High current levels and short circuits in the printed circuit board can damage the printed circuit board and even cause a fire. Network switches, line cards, and other electronic circuits that draw tens or even hundreds of amps of current are susceptible to small imperfections in circuit board construction or materials. Printed circuit boards require thicker copper sheets, more layers, or more exotic and expensive materials to safely handle these high current levels. High amperage fuses may be bulky, unusable, or even incapable of preventing a fire from the high current levels experienced by the printed circuit board until the current reaches the fuse. The printed circuit board must have enough copper layers to carry the full current, which can consume many copper layers, which increases cost and increases wiring complexity. Furthermore, the current levels are so high that failure of the PCB results in increased risk of short circuits and fire.

Disclosure of Invention

In some embodiments, a bus bar and connector assembly is provided. The bus bar and connector assembly includes: a printed circuit board having an attached connector arranged to couple to a first bus bar; and a second bus bar coupled to the connector. The bus bar and connector assembly includes the connector arranged to distribute a first portion of an electrical current from the first bus bar to the printed circuit board and a second portion of the electrical current from the first bus bar to the second bus bar. It will be appreciated that the embodiments enable a full or partial bypass of the printed circuit board to be connected to a secondary or external bus bar, thereby reducing or eliminating the need for the printed circuit board to carry some or all of the current.

In some embodiments, a bus bar and connector assembly is provided. The bus bar and connector assembly includes a first bus bar arranged to carry a first current, a printed circuit board, and a second bus bar. The connector is arranged to transmit a second current from the first bus bar to the printed circuit board and a third current from the first bus bar to the second bus bar.

In some embodiments, a method of distributing electrical current through a printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assembly is provided. The method includes passing the current through a first bus bar and distributing a first portion of the current from the first bus bar to a printed circuit board through a connector. The method includes distributing a second portion of the electrical current from the first bus bar to a second bus bar through the connector.

Other aspects and advantages of the embodiments will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, illustrating by way of example the principles of the described embodiments.

Drawings

The described embodiments and their advantages are best understood by referring to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. These drawings in no way limit any changes in form and detail that may be made to the described embodiments by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the described embodiments.

Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assembly according to some embodiments.

Fig. 2 is a side view illustrating current distribution and components of a printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assembly according to some embodiments.

Fig. 3 is a perspective view of a connector and bus bar suitable for use in the embodiment shown in fig. 1 and 2.

Fig. 4 is a perspective view of a connector with a broken bus bar showing details of a fastener of the bus bar and fingers of the connector tip according to some embodiments.

Fig. 5 is a flow diagram of a method of distributing electrical current through a printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assembly, which may be practiced with embodiments described herein.

Detailed Description

The printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assemblies described herein address a variety of current distribution issues in electronic systems. Embodiments of the electronic system may comprise a network switch, but it is also readily designed for other types of electronic devices. The connector couples two different bus bars and a printed circuit board and distributes current from one bus bar to the printed circuit board and the other bus bar. In rack-mounted or modular systems, multiple instances of a printed circuit board with such connectors may be inserted into a bus bar in a backplane or midplane and distribute current to the printed circuit board and bus bar for use by various components of the electronic system. This improves the use of the printed circuit board to distribute all current from the backplane or midplane to all components of the electronic system and allows the connector to drop current to the printed circuit board as needed while allowing additional current to pass to other components through the bus bars that bypass the circuit board. Furthermore, since the connector only carries the correct amount of current used locally by the printed circuit board, rather than the full current of the printed circuit board and other downstream components, fewer holes need to be drilled in the printed circuit board for the connector pins, thereby reducing the "swiss cheese" effect on the power (and other) layers of the printed circuit board. The described embodiments reduce the number of feeds inside the printed circuit board and move at least a portion of the feeds to the bus bar, thereby reducing the amount of "un-fused copper" to improve safety and reclaim printed circuit board resources. Furthermore, the embodiment has fuses that can now be correctly sized for the current used by components on the printed circuit board near the connector, rather than for the area of the printed circuit board plus the downstream component current.

Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a printed circuit board, bus bar and connector assembly according to the present disclosure. Although only one connector 104 and one printed circuit board 102 (dashed lines) are shown here, further embodiments may have multiple connectors 104 and/or multiple printed circuit boards 102, for example as shown in fig. 2. The connector tip 114 of the connector 104 is located between the two bus bars 106, 108, e.g., extending vertically as shown in fig. 1. The pins 116 of the connector 104 are assembled to the printed circuit board 102, such as by soldering or some other mechanism. Two additional bus bars 110, 112 extend from and are electrically coupled to the connector (see, e.g., fig. 4). In various embodiments, various electronic components are assembled to printed circuit board 102 and draw power through connector 104. One or more additional electronic components are connected to the bus bars 110, 112 and draw power through the bus bars 110, 112. As shown, the bus bars 110 and 112 are external and spaced from the printed circuit board 102.

Fig. 1 shows one arrangement of printed circuit board, bus bar and connector assembly, and it should be understood that many variations are possible. In some embodiments, the bus bars 106, 108 extend along a backplane or mid-plane (e.g., of a rack-mount system or a modular system). In some embodiments, the bus bars 106, 108 may be held in a spaced apart arrangement by clips, brackets, shims, clamps, or the like. In some systems, the bus bars 106, 108 form a balanced power and ground, as do the bus bars 110, 112. Additional bus bars may be added for additional supply voltages, power supply of analog and digital circuits, etc. In some systems, the ground is distributed through multiple ground planes in the printed circuit board and power is distributed from the bus bar to the printed circuit board through the connectors, rather than balancing the bus bar through power and ground. Although fig. 1 shows two bus bars 110 and 112 extending from the connector 104, it should be understood that one or more bus bars may extend from the connector 104 outside of the printed circuit board 102, depending on the application.

Fig. 2 is a side view illustrating current distribution and one exemplary structural configuration of a printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assembly in one embodiment of a rack-mounted or modular network switch. Each printed circuit board 102 has the electronic circuitry of one or more network switches, but in further embodiments other electronic circuitry for alternative functions may be readily used. In some embodiments, the printed circuit board 102 is coupled into a backplane or mid-plane. Details of hardware, housings, panels, cables, etc. have been omitted so as not to obscure the details of the disclosed mechanisms. As noted above, while one example is provided as a network switch, this example is not intended to be limiting as the embodiments can be extended to any suitable electronic device.

Still referring to fig. 2, current 206 flows through bus bar 106, through connector tip 114, and to connector 104. The current is then split, with some flowing into the distribution layer of the printed circuit board 102 and some flowing into and through the bus bar 110 to another component 204 (or to another portion of the printed circuit board 102). For example, the component 204 may be an optical module, a fan arranged to cool a printed circuit board, a front panel, or the like. It should be understood that in some embodiments, the bus bars 110 and 112 may be coupled to components that are not attached to the printed circuit board 102. In some embodiments, the component 204 may be another connector and may carry current from the bus bars 110 and 112 into the printed circuit board 102 where it will then enter the fuse. In some embodiments, the amount of current flowing through the connector 104 to the printed circuit board 102 is less than the amount of current flowing through the bus bar 110 to another circuit or component. It should be understood that the description of current is a general description of convention with respect to positive or negative current in this context, and not a specific description with respect to the polarity of the charge carriers. As shown, the bus bar 110 is external to the printed circuit board 102 and spaced apart from the printed circuit board 102. Thus, the bus bar 110 may be configured to accommodate large currents without regard to limitations on the thickness of the power and ground planes of the printed circuit board 102.

Fig. 3 is a perspective view of a connector 104 and bus bars 110, 112 suitable for use in the embodiment shown in fig. 1 and 2. Both sides of the connector tip 114 have fingers 302 extending therefrom. For example, the fingers 302 on one side of the connector tip 114 may contact a ground bus bar, and the fingers 302 on the opposite side of the connector tip 114 may contact a power bus bar. In some embodiments, the fingers 302 are spring-mounted such that the connector tip 114 may be pressed between the bus bars 106, 108 and float relative to the bus bars 106, 108. It should be understood that the present configuration provides electrical contact without the need to rigidly mount the connector 104 to the bus bars 106, 108, and vice versa. The present floating arrangement also imparts in-situ physical impact resistance to the bus bar and connector assembly. Alternative embodiments of the connector may have other types of mounts and one or more bus bars of the connector (specific to the needs of the system).

Continuing with fig. 3, the pins 116 of the connector 104 may be grouped in various ways, with some of the pins 116 providing a ground connection from one of the bus bars 108 and other pins 116 providing a power connection from the other bus bar 106. Alternatively, where the ground is routed directly through the ground plane of the printed circuit board rather than from the backplane through the connector 104, all of the pins 116 may be dedicated to power connections. Other variations with various power supply polarities and multiple power supplies, etc. can be readily devised. The bus bars 110, 112 extending from the connector 104 outside the printed circuit board may be of various lengths, parallel to each other, aligned or staggered, or diverging from the connector 104, etc. Some embodiments have one bus bar 110 attached to the connector 104, while other embodiments may have more than two bus bars attached to the connector 104. In various embodiments, the ends of the bus bars 110, 112 distal from the connector 104 may be attached to the assembly, or attached elsewhere on the printed circuit board, or attached to another printed circuit board or connector, or the like. The bus bars 110, 112 may be constructed of copper or some other suitable electrically conductive material. Since the bus bars 110, 112 are external to the printed circuit board, the thickness and composition of the bus bars is independent of the printed circuit board.

Fig. 4 is a perspective view of the connector 104 with the bus bars 110, 112 broken away, showing details of the fasteners 402, 404 of the bus bars 110, 112 and the fingers 302 of the connector tip 114. One bus bar 110 is fastened to the connector 104 with a nut 404 and bolt (not shown) and the other bus bar 110 is fastened or secured to the connector 104 with a bolt 402 and nut (not shown), but many other types of fasteners may be used, such as brazing, welding, or other means that are easy to design. In the illustrated embodiment, the fingers 302 have an arcuate and cantilevered support at the body of the connector 104, but other shapes/types of fingers, electrical connection surfaces, and mechanical connection arrangements can be readily devised. Additional details regarding connector 104 may be found in U.S. application serial No. 15/346,407, which is incorporated by reference for all purposes.

Fig. 5 is a flow diagram of a method of distributing electrical current through a printed circuit board, bus bar, and connector assembly, which may be practiced with embodiments described herein. To correspond to the embodiments in the figures, fig. 1 and 2 show a first bus bar 106 and a second bus bar 110, and fig. 1 shows a third bus bar 108 and a fourth bus bar 112. The numbering of the bus bars is arbitrary and merely by way of example, and can be readily changed for further examples. In act 502, a current is passed through a first bus bar. In act 504, a portion of the current from the first bus bar is distributed to the printed circuit board through the connector. In some embodiments, the portion of the electrical current is distributed to the printed circuit board through the connector and the fuse. In act 506, another portion of the current is distributed from the first bus bar to the second bus bar through the connector. In act 508, the another portion of the current is distributed from the second bus bar to the components.

In act 510 of fig. 5, a reverse current is passed through the third bus bar. In some embodiments, the current through the first and third bus bars and the reverse current form a balanced power and ground. In act 512, a portion of the reverse current from the third bus bar is distributed to the printed circuit board through the connector and the additional fuse. In act 514, another portion of the reverse current is distributed from the third bus bar to the fourth bus bar through the connector. In act 516, the other portion of the reverse current is distributed from the fourth bus bar to the components. In some embodiments, the current through the second and fourth bus bars forms balanced power and ground.

Detailed illustrative embodiments are disclosed herein. However, specific functional details disclosed herein are merely representative for purposes of describing the embodiments. Embodiments may, however, be embodied in many alternate forms and should not be construed as limited to only the embodiments set forth herein. It should be understood that the description of directions and orientations is for ease of explanation and that the device is not limited to orientations relative to gravity. In other words, the device may be mounted upside down, right side up, diagonal, vertical, horizontal, etc., and the description of direction and orientation is relative to a portion of the device itself and is not absolute.

It will be understood that, although the terms first, second, etc. may be used herein to describe various steps or computations, these steps or computations should not be limited by these terms. These terms are only used to distinguish one step or calculation from another. For example, a first calculation may be referred to as a second calculation, and similarly, a second step may be referred to as a first step, without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. As used herein, the term "and/or" and "/" symbol encompass any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.

As used herein, the singular forms "a" and "the" are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms "comprises" and/or "comprising," when used herein, specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof. Thus, the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting.

It should also be noted that, in some alternative implementations, the functions/acts noted may occur out of the order noted in the figures. For example, two figures shown in succession may, in fact, be executed substantially concurrently, or the figures may sometimes be executed in the reverse order, depending upon the functionality/acts involved.

Although the method operations are described in a particular order, it will be understood that other operations may be performed between the described operations, the described operations may be adjusted so that they occur at slightly different times, or the described operations may be distributed in systems that allow processing operations to occur at various intervals relative to processing.

Various units, circuits, or other components may be described or claimed as being "configured to" perform a task or tasks. In such contexts, the phrase "configured to" is used to denote structure by indicating that the unit/circuit/component includes structure (e.g., a circuit or mechanical feature) that performs one or more tasks during operation. Thus, a unit/circuit/component is said to be configured to perform a task even when the specified unit/circuit/component is not currently operational (e.g., not turned on). The units/circuits/components used with the "configured to" language include hardware, e.g., circuitry, memory storing program instructions executable to perform operations, and so on. The detailed description of a unit/circuit/component being "configured to" perform one or more tasks is expressly not intended to refer to the 35u.s.c.112 sixth paragraph for that unit/circuit/component. Additionally, "configured to" may encompass a general-purpose structure (e.g., a general-purpose circuit) that is manipulated by software and/or firmware (e.g., an FPGA or a general-purpose processor executing software) to operate in a manner that enables disputed tasks to be performed. "configured to" may also include rewriting a manufacturing process (e.g., a semiconductor manufacturing facility) to manufacture a device (e.g., an integrated circuit or an article of manufacture) suitable for performing or carrying out one or more tasks, or designing an article or apparatus to have certain features or functions.

The foregoing description, for purpose of explanation, has been described with reference to specific embodiments. However, the illustrative discussions above are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the embodiments and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the embodiments and various modifications as may be suited to the particular use contemplated. Accordingly, the present embodiments are to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive, and the invention is not to be limited to the details given herein, but may be modified within the scope and equivalents of the appended claims.

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