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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A packaging construction for electronic components, said construction
comprising:
a plurality of circuit packaging elements, each having a plurality of
contact areas to which input and output signal leads are connected from
within the circuit packaging element;
a plurality of insulated boards disposed between adjacent pairs of said
circuit packaging elements, each of said insulated boards having a
plurality of openings through it, at least some of which are at positions
corresponding to said contact areas;
a plurality of conductive connector elements disposed in selected ones of
the openings in said insulated boards, each of said connector elements
being a wadded strand of conductive wire that is deformed when compressed
between contact areas and makes multiple electrical contacts between said
contact areas; and
means for applying a compressive force to said circuit packaging elements
and said insulated boards, to compress said connector elements into
electrical contact with the contact areas and thereby establish desired
electrical connections between contact areas on said circuit packaging
elements;
whereby interconnection path lengths between circuit packaging elements are
substantially shortened, and input and output leads in said circuit
packaging elements are not required to connect to edge connectors.
2. A packaging construction as set forth in claim 1, wherein:
said circuit packaging elements include printed circuit boards having
components mounted thereon;
said construction further includes a plurality of feed-through spacer
boards disposed between said circuit boards and having sufficient
thickness to provide clearance for the circuit board components; and
interconnection between circuit boards is made from one circuit board to
one of said spacer boards, through a first set of said connector elements,
and thence to an adjacent circuit board through a second set of said
connector elements.
3. A packaging construction as set forth in claim 1, wherein:
said construction includes a plurality of two-sided printed circuit boards
for use in establishing interconnection between said circuit packaging
elements; and
interconnection between said circuit packaging elements is established
through a first set of said connector elements to connect from one circuit
packaging element to a two-sided circuit board, and then through a second
set of said connector elements to connect from the two-sided circuit board
to a second of said circuit packaging elements and so forth through a
selected number of layers, to effect a layer-replaceable multilayer board.
4. A packaging construction as set forth in claim 3, wherein:
said circuit packaging elements include printed circuit boards and
integrated-circuit chip packages.
5. A packaging construction for electronic components, said construction
comprising:
a plurality of circuit packaging elements, each having a plurality of
contact areas to which input and output signal leads are connected from
within the circuit packaging element;
a plurality of insulated boards disposed between adjacent pairs of said
circuit packaging elements, each of said insulated boards having a
plurality of openings through it, at least some of which are at positions
corresponding to said contact areas;
a plurality of conductive connector elements disposed in selected ones of
the openings in said insulated boards; and
means for applying a compressive force to said circuit packaging elements
and said insulated boards, to compress said connector elements into
electrical contact with the contact areas and thereby establish desired
electrical connections between contact areas on said circuit packaging
elements;
whereby interconnection path lengths between circuit packaging elements are
substantially shortened, and input and output leads in said circuit
packaging elements are not required to connect to edge connectors;
and wherein
said construction includes a plurality of two-sided printed circuit boards
for use in establishing interconnection between said circuit packaging
elements,
interconnection between said circuit packaging elements is established
through a first set of connector elements to connect from one circuit
packaging element to a two-sided circuit board, and then through a second
set of said connector elements to connect from the two-sided circuit board
to a second of said circuit packaging elements, and so forth through a
selected number of layers, to effect a layer-replaceable multilayer board;
some of said circuit packaging elements and said two-sided circuit boards
include contact areas on their edges; and
said construction further includes at least one additional set of connector
elements and one insulated board for contacting some of said contact areas
on the edges of said two-sided circuit boards and said circuit packaging
elements, and at least one additional circuit packaging element oriented
at right angles to the others, for connection to the edge contact areas.
6. A packaging construction as set forth in claim 5, wherein:
each of said connector elements is a wadded strand of conductive wire that
is deformed when compressed between contact areas and makes multiple
electrical contacts between said contact areas. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to techniques for the packaging of
multiple circuit elements, and more particularly to structures for the
interconnection of multiple circuit elements, such as circuit boards and
integrated-circuit (IC) ("chip") packages. Complex circuitry is often
implemented in the form of a number of multi-layer printed circuit boards,
which must be appropriately interconnected to permit the circuitry to
perform its intended function.
In the past, circuit boards in very large scale integration (VLSI) systems
have been interconnected by means of "mother" boards having connectors
into which the other circuit boards are plugged. An alternative approach
uses cable harnesses and connectors to attach to the boards. The use of
either mother boards or cable harnesses adds considerably to the cost of
the finished product, and has another important consequence. For
high-speed circuits in VLSI systems, a major concern is that
interconnecting cables contribute a large amount of capacitance and
inductance, and thereby limit the speed of operation of the circuitry.
Insulation material that has to be used in the cable harness further
increases interconnection reactances and aggravates this problem.
Moreover, the use of cable harnesses can add as much as twenty-five
percent to the volume of the entire assembly, and can add accordingly to
the assembly weight.
Another significant problem arising from the use of cables and mother
boards is that all input and output leads in each board must be terminated
at an edge of the board, for attachment to a back-plane connector. A
signal originating at an area of the board remote from the edge connector
must weave its way through other conductors and components on the board.
This necessitates long lead lengths and complicates the board design,
often requiring additional board layers and a higher density of wiring.
In accordance with conventional packaging techniques, integrated-circuit
chips are interconnected by means of multilayer printed circuit boards.
The boards are, in turn, interconnected by a variety of "back-panel"
wiring techniques using wire-wrap terminals, soldered terminals, and
plug-in connectors.
Planar multilayer printed circuit boards include such materials as epoxy
glass, Polymide, or ceramic materials, like aluminum oxide (Al.sub.2
O.sub.3). All of these materials have relatively high dielectric constants
and present serious problems to the highspeed circuit designer. The
distributed capacitance of the necessary interconnections in a high speed
system using multilayer circuit boards may be so high as to demand a
charging current that is a significant factor contributing to the total
power dissipated in the circuitry. A related problem is that the
distributed capacitance of the interconnections effectively limits their
length if the capacitance values are to be kept within reasonable limits.
For typical high speed systems, the associated printed circuit boards may
have geometric features with widths of approximately 0.07 inches and
spacings of the same dimension. For these parameters the associated
distributed capacitance limits the maximum lead length to about 10 to 15
inches.
The reactances resulting from the use of conventional interconnection
technology result in an even more important problem. High signal
propagation times resulting from the interconnection reactances may render
high speed system completely inoperative, or at best extremely limited in
operating speed and data throughput.
The problems described with respect to high speed circuits have become
aggravated in recent years as the complexity of the circuitry has
increased. Also the chip packages themselves require very large numbers of
leads for input and output of signals. Existing high speed circuit designs
require up to two hundred input-output leads, and future designs could
easily extend this requirement to around five hundred leads. To
accommodate a modest chip package having 132 leads requires a circuit
board with over sixteen layers. Moreover, some manufacturers are already
using boards with up to thirty-three layers. Circuit boards of this
complexity require considerable time to design and produce. A design
change of even the simplest nature can result in scrapping of the
associated circuit boards, at further cost to the manufacturer.
To obviate or minimize these problems that arise from the use of
conventional interconnection techniques, it has become apparent that a new
packaging approach must be employed. The new approach should minimize the
lead lengths between interconnected circuits, and provide a
correspondingly high packing density that makes more effective use of
modern integrated-circuit fabrication techniques. The present invention is
directed to these ends.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention resides in a novel circuit packaging construction, in
which multiple circuit elements, such as printed circuit boards and
integrated-circuit chip packages, are electrically interconnected at their
faces or edges, as is most convenient, to minimize interconnection lead
lengths both between and within the circuit elements.
In one embodiment of the invention, for use with high speed circuits, a
three-dimensional packaging construction is employed. At least some of the
circuit elements in this construction are IC chip packages, each
comprising a circuit chip mounted on a flat packaging board having contact
areas on its faces and edges. Leads from the chip to the contact areas are
not limited to a particular face or edge of the packaging board. The chip
packages are arranged in chip modules, each with a plurality of chip
packages having their faces parallel to a first planar direction. Between
each pair of adjacent chip packages is at least one two-sided printed
circuit board, having contact areas on each face for contacting the chip
packages, and having conductive paths from one side of the board to the
other, formed either through or around the edges of the board. Electrical
contacts between the chip packages and the two-sided circuit boards is
established by means of connector elements supported by insulating boards.
Adjacent chip modules are interconnected between adjacent side edges by
transverse interconnection means, comprising connector elements,
insulating boards, and two-sided circuit boards, to establish connections
between selected side-edge contact areas of one chip module and selected
side-edge contact areas of an adjacent chip module. This transverse
interconnection means has its connecting circuit boards and insulating
boards parallel to a second planar direction at right-angles to the first.
In a similar fashion, top and bottom edges of each chip module are
interconnected with adjacent chip modules by intermodule connection means
arranged in a planar direction at right-angles to the other two. This
intermodule connection means extends across the edges of all chip modules
in a layer of chip modules, as well as across the edges of the transverse
interconnection means, thus permitting interconnection between all chip
modules in the layers above and below the intermodule connection means.
In another embodiment of the invention, the circuit elements are multilayer
printed circuit boards on which are mounted a variety of electrical
components, some of which have substantial thickness. in this embodiment,
the invention includes between each pair of adjacent boards two insulated
boards for supporting and locating equal pluralities of connector
elements, and a feed-through spacer panel interposed between the two
insulated boards. The spacer panel has contact areas corresponding in
location to the contact areas on the circuit boards to be interconnected.
Electrical connections are therefore established between the circuit
boards through the feed-through spacer panel. The spacer panel is of
sufficient thickness to provide clearance for the components disposed
between the two circuit boards. There may be a number of such circuit
boards arranged in parallel and clamped together to make the electrical
connections through the connector elements and feed-through spacer panels
between each pair of adjacent boards.
In each of the embodiments described, the connector elements are preferably
each formed as a single strand of wadded wire that makes electrical
contact at multiple points when compressed against a contact area.
Connectors of this type have significant advantages over soldered or
wire-wrapped connections, and provide connections of high integrity and
reliability. In contrast to a soldered connection, this mechanical
connector element has very few associated variables that can affect the
quality of the connection. In fact the only significant variables are the
size of the element, which can be fairly accurately controlled, and the
compressive force used to make the connection, which is also easily
controllable.
In the illustrative embodiment of the threedimensional packaging
construction, one edge of each chip package is in contact with a heat
sink, leaving two faces and three edges for interconnection contact areas.
Thus, only two layers of chip modules are used, one in contact with a heat
sink at the bottom of the assembly and the other in contact with a heat
sink at the top of the assembly. It will be understood, however, that in
particular designs it may be possible to include more than two layers of
chip modules in a single integrated package.
Use of this three-dimensional packaging construction allows chip packages
to be located at minimum distances from each other, thus minimizing lead
inductance and capacitance. A related advantage is that lead "fan out"
problems in the chip packages are reduced substantially, since input and
output leads can be brought out to any of five faces of the package. Since
no solder is used in asembling the package, the connections are extremely
reliable and design modifications are easy to implement. The chip packages
can be reused or even moved to other assemblies in the event of a design
change.
Another advantage is that, since no multilayer circuit boards are needed,
the two-sided boards used can be of materials with lower dielectric
constants, further reducing the capacitance of the interconnection
circuitry. For conventional designs, these materials are usually rejected
as unsuitable for use in multilayer boards because of poor temperature,
solderability or lamination performance.
It will be appreciated from the foregoing that the present invention
represents a significant advance in the field of packaging of electronic
components. Other aspects and advantages of the present invention will
become apparent from the following more detailed description, taken in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a fragmentary, exploded perspective view showing the
interconnection of two circuit boards using the technique of the
invention;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged and fragmentary sectional view showing two circuit
boards interconnected using the technique of the invention;
FIG. 3 is a fragmentary perspective view of a three-dimensional
construction employing the principles of the invention, with portions
broken away for clarity;
FIG. 4 is an exploded perspective view showing a plurality of circuit
boards interconnected by face contacts and by edge contacts;
FIG. 5 is a simplified view showing one method of applying compression
force to the assembled circuit boards of FIG. 5 in one axial direction;
and
FIG. 6 is a sectional view of another embodiment of the invention, used to
interconnect circuit boards having mounted components of substantial
thickness.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIGS. 1 and 2 illustrate an example of the type of connection employed in
the invention illustrated in FIGS. 3-6. FIGS. 1 and 2, depict two twosided
printed circuit boards, indicated generally by reference numerals 10 and
12, between which selected electrical connections are to be made. Rather
than having each desired connection point connected to an edge of the
board, where a connector plug might be attached, the connection points are
instead formed as contact areas or pads 14 at more convenient locations on
the boards 10 and 12. Interposed between the circuit boards 10 and 12 is
an insulated board 16 referred to as a button board. The button board has
a plurality of circular openings 18 formed through it, and in each
selected opening is placed a connector element 20. The connector elements
20 are formed from single strand of metal wire, each strand being wadded
together to form a nearly cylindrical "button" of material. When one of
the button elements 20 is placed in one of the holes 18, the button
material projects slightly out of the hole at both ends. When a
compressive force is applied to the assembly comrising the two circuit
boards 10 and 12, the insulating board 16 and the connector buttons 20,
the latter are compressed against the contact areas 14, and an extremely
reliable electrical contact is formed.
In contrast to a soldered connection, this mechanical connector element has
very few associated variables that can affect the equality of the
connection. In fact the only significant variables are the size of the
element, which can be fairly accurately controlled, and the compressive
force used to make the connection, which is also easily controllable. The
wadded wire elements 20 may be fabricated as required for particular
applications. In the embodiments described, the button connector elements
20 are manufactured by Technical Wire Products, Inc. of Piscataway, N.J.,
under the trademark Fuzz Button.
The buttons 20 as employed in these illustrative embodiments are fabricated
using 0.002 inch beryllium copper wire, which is gold plated and wadded
into a nearly cylindrical button of 0.042 inch diameter and length. The
button under compression makes multiple contacts with a contact pad, and
provides multiple conductive paths through the structure. In addition,
each contact made by the button is at a very high pressure, because of the
type of spring formed by the wadded wire and the small area of each
contact point.
FIG. 3 illustrates the three-dimensional packaging structure of the
invention. In the illustrated construction, a plurality of chip packages
24 are disposed in a parallel relationship and interconnected in various
ways to be described. Each of the chip packages has contact areas 26 to
which input and output leads to and from the chip are connected. The
contact areas 26 may be on either face of the chip package, or on as many
as three of its edges. The fourth edge, not visible in the view of FIG. 3,
is used for making contact with a heat sink 28. Between each adjacent pair
of chip packages 24 are two two-sided circuit boards 30, which serve to
make connections between the chip packages, and with edge contact areas on
the circuit boards. Connections between chip packages and circuit boards
and between adjacent circuit boards are made using button boards 32 and
connector buttons like the buttons 20 discussed with reference to FIGS. 1
and 2.
The chip packages 24, circuit boards 30, button boards 32 and connector
buttons together comprise one chip module. Another chip module is
indicated generally by reference numeral 34, and it will be noted that
this module is connected to the first one by a tranverse module
interconnect 36. The transverse module interconnect 36 comprises two
additional twosided circuit boards 38 and three spacer boards 40 with
appropriately positioned connector buttons (not shown in FIG. 3). The
boards 38 and button boards 40 forming the transverse interconnect 36 are
of the same height as the chip packages and interconnects in each chip
module. Further transverse interconnects are shown at 42 and 44. An array
of chip modules and transverse interconnects is referred to herein as a
chip module layer.
Completing the three-dimensional construction is an intermodule
interconnect 46, which extends over the entire chip module layer described
above. The intermodule interconnect 46 also includes two two-sided circuit
boards 48 and button boards 50. Through this interconnect, connections are
established both between two chip module layers and between chip modules
of the same layer.
FIG. 4 shows how the concept of the invention is applied to connect circuit
boards along a principal axis and along a transverse direction. The
construction of FIG. 4 includes a plurality of circuit boards 52
interconnected in the same manner as FIG. 1, and additional circuit boards
54 and 56 at right angles to the first boards 52. Button boards 58 are
alternated between the circuit boards 54 and one button board is
interposed between the circuit boards 54 and the edges of the boards 52.
Likewise, button boards 60 are alternated between the circuit boards 56
and one is positioned between the boards 56 and the edges of the circuit
boards 52. Buttons 64 form connector elements in the button boards.
As indicated by the arrows 65 and 66, compressive force is applied to the
stack of boards 52 and to the stacks of boards 54 and 56. These
compressive forces may be applied in any convenient manner, one example
being shown in FIG. 5. A rigid housing 70 includes a fixed rear pressure
plate 72 bearing on one face of a stack of boards to be compressed and a
movable pressure plate 74 bearing on the opposite face of the same stack
of boards. A reaction plate 76 is disposed between the movable pressure
plate and an inside wall of the housing 70. A number of pressure screws 78
are threadably engaged in the reaction plate 76 and bear on the outer face
of the movable pressure plate 74. Tightening the pressure screws 78 forces
the movable pressure plate 74 away from the reaction plate 76, thereby
applying a compressive force between the two pressure plates 72 and 74.
Another embodiment of the invention is shown in FIG. 6. A plurality of
circuit boards 80 have components of substantial thickness mounted on them
and are interconnected by means of button boards 82 and feed-through
spacers 84. The spacers 84 are needed to space the circuit boards 80 apart
sufficiently to provide clearance for the components mounted on the
boards. The button boards 82 are positioned one on each side of each
spacer 84. Buttons 86 establish appropriate connections between the
circuit boards 80 and the spacers 84, which are insulated boards with
conductive-through holes that establish electrical connections from one
side of the spacers to the other. Both the spacers 84 and the button
boards 82 are made with appropriate openings to clear the circuit boards
components, and the entire assembly is clamped together with nuts 88 and
bolts 90 extending through all of the circuit boards 80.
It will be appreciated from the foregoing that the present invention
represents a significant advantage over packaging techniques of the prior
art. In particular, the novel construction of the invention allows for the
interconnection of multiple circuit elements, such as circuit boards and
IC chip packages, without the use of cable harnesses or separate backpanel
wiring techniques. The novel construction also needs no soldered
connections and no multilayered circuit boards to effect the desired
interconnections. Even more importantly, use of the invention results in
substantial reduction in the circuit reactances of interconnection
conduction paths, and a corresponding increase in the speed of operation
of the circuitry.
It will also be appreciated that, although specific embodiments of the
invention have been described in detail for purposes of illustration,
various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and
scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be limited
except as by the appended claims.
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Description  |
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