Engineering:Board-to-board connector

From HandWiki
Revision as of 13:27, 4 February 2024 by JMinHep (talk | contribs) (linkage)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Board-to-board (BTB) connectors are used to connect printed circuit boards (PCB), electronic components that contain a conductive pattern printed on the surface of the insulating base in an accurate and repeatable manner. Each terminal on a BTB connector is connected to a PCB. A BTB connector includes housing and a specific number of terminals. The terminal is made from a conductive material (mostly copper alloy), and plated to improve conductivity and antirust. Terminals transmit the current/signal between PCBs connected by BTB; the housing is made of insulating material (mostly plastic).

Classification

BTB connectors are divided up into four mounting types:

  1. Through-hole technology
  2. Surface-mount technology
  3. Plug-in technology[1]
  4. Solderless stacking mezzanine technology[2]

BTB connectors are selected by considering the mounting method, pin pitch, number of the rows (aka number of the ways), pin length, stacker height etc.

See also

References

External links