Spring Lock
A spring lock includes a sinusoidal spring that has one or more crests and troughs formed along a length of the sinusodial spring, the length extending along a sliding axis, the one or more crests and troughs forming a sinusoidal spring profile. The spring lock further includes a lock bar that has a track extending along the sliding axis, the track being configured to hold the sinusodial spring and allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis, the track further including one or more depressions and plateaus with the depressions and plateaus forming a lock bar profile, wherein the spring lock is locked when the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are out-of-phase and the spring lock is unlocked when the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are in-phase.
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The invention was made, at least in part, with support from the U.S. Government under Grant No. N00173-12-D-2004-0001, which was awarded by the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). The U.S. Government has certain rights in the invention.
TECHNICAL FIELDThe present disclosure relates to a spring lock.
SUMMARYApplicants have identified the need for a low-cost, easy to use, circuit board (PCB) retention system that requires few or no tools to secure a PCB to a computer housing or chassis. The present disclosure in aspects and embodiments addresses these various needs and problems by providing a spring locking mechanism.
In embodiments, the spring lock includes a sinusoidal spring comprising: one or more crests and troughs formed along a length of the sinusodial spring, the length extending along a sliding axis, the one or more crests and troughs forming a sinusoidal spring profile; and a lock bar comprising a track extending along the sliding axis, the track configured to hold the sinusodial spring and allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis, the track comprising one or more depressions and plateaus, the depressions and plateaus forming a lock bar profile. The spring lock is locked when the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are out-of-phase and the spring lock is unlocked when the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are in-phase.
In embodiments, the sinusodial spring profile and the lock bar profile are regular and symmetric about a locking axis, the locking axis being perpindicular to the sliding axis. In another embodiment, the sinusodial spring profile and the lock bar profile are non-symmetric about the locking axis, the locking axis being perpindicular to the sliding axis. In yet another embodiment, the sinusodial spring profile and the lock bar profile are non-symmetric about the sliding axis.
In embodiments, the track comprises walls defining a track width, the track width being slighly larger than a sinusoidal spring width. In another embodiment, the walls comprise one or more protrusions configured to retain the sinusoidal spring along a locking axis while allowing the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis, the locking axis being perpindicular to the sliding axis.
In embodiments, the lock bar further comprises an anchoring block at one end of the lock bar, the anchoring block restricting the sinusoidal spring motion along the sliding axis. The the lock bar may further comprise a removal component.
In embodiments, the one or more depressions form at least one primary sinusoidal depression and the one ore more plateaus form at least one primary sinusoidal plateau. In another embodiment, the at least two primary sinusoidal depressions form a primary sinusoidal depression period; the at least two primary sinusoidal plateaus form a primary sinusoidal plateau period, and the primary sinusoidal depression period and the primary sinusoidal plateau period are substantial equal to the sinusoidal spring period.
In embodiments, the primary sinusoidal depression period is out-of-phase with the primary sinusoidal plateau period or the at least two primary sinusoidal plateaus comprise at least two secondary sinusoidal depressions.
In another embodiment, the one or more depressions form a primary sinusoidal depression and a secondary sinusoidal depression, the primary and secondary sinusoidal depressions configured to restrict the sinusoidal spring and lock bar from involuntarily shifting from a locked position to an unlocked position. A secondary sinusoidal depression surface may be configured to restrict motion of the sinusodial spring relative to the lock bar.
Also disclosed is a method for securing a component between an upper static surface and a lower static surface, the method including: providing a sinusoidal spring having a sinusoidal spring period along a sliding axis, a sinusoidal amplitude along a locking axis, and a width along a lateral axis, the sliding axis, locking axis and lateral axis are all perpendicular to one another and providing a lock bar comprising a track along the sliding axis, the track configured to allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis between an unlocked and a locked position. The method further includes placing the sinusoidal spring, lock bar, and flat component between the upper static surface and the lower static surface and moving the sinusoidal spring, relative to the lock bar, along the sliding axis from the unlocked to the locked position.
In another method, a shortest distance between the upper static surface and the lower static surface is greater than or equal to a combined unlocked profile thickness of the sinusoidal spring, lock bar, and flat component when the sinusoidal spring and the lock bar are in the unlocked position and is less than a combined locked profile thickness of the sinusoidal spring, lock bar, and flat component when the sinusoidal spring and the lock bar are in the locked position.
In another embodiment, a spring lock includes a sinusoidal spring having one or more crests or troughs along a locking axis, the crests or troughs forming a sinusoidal spring profile, a length along a sliding axis, and a width along a lateral axis, wherein the sliding axis, locking axis and lateral axis are all perpendicular to one another. The spring lock further includes a lock bar that has a track along the sliding axis, the track comprising one or more depressions or plateaus, the depressions or plateaus forming a lock bar profile; wherein the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are configured to be in-phase or out-of-phase with respect to each other.
In embodiments, the spring lock is configured to allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis to change the spring lock between the unlocked and locked positions. In other embodiments, the lock bar is configured to restrict motion of the sinusoidal spring along the lateral axis. A lock bar may further comprise an anchoring block at one end of the lock bar, the anchoring block configured to restrict the sinusoidal spring motion along one direction of the sliding axis.
The present disclosure covers apparatuses and associated methods for a spring lock. In the following description, numerous specific details are provided for a thorough understanding of specific preferred embodiments. However, embodiments can be practiced without one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, etc. In some cases, well-known structures, materials, or operations are not shown or described in detail in order to avoid obscuring aspects of the preferred embodiments. Furthermore, the described features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in a variety of alternative embodiments. Thus, the following more detailed description of the embodiments of the present invention, as illustrated in some aspects in the drawings, is not intended to limit the scope of the invention, but is merely representative of the various embodiments of the invention.
In this specification and the claims that follow, singular forms such as “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural forms unless the content clearly dictates otherwise. All ranges disclosed herein include, unless specifically indicated, all endpoints and intermediate values. In addition, “optional,” “optionally,” or “or” refer, for example, to instances in which subsequently described circumstance may or may not occur, and include instances in which the circumstance occurs and instances in which the circumstance does not occur. The terms “one or more” and “at least one” refer, for example, to instances in which one of the subsequently described circumstances occurs, and to instances in which more than one of the subsequently described circumstances occurs.
The sinusoidal spring 100 may further comprise one or more crests 112 and troughs 110. In the illustrated embodiment, the sinusoidal spring has four crests 112 and five troughs 110. More or fewer crests 112 or troughs 110 may be included depending on the overall length of the sinusoidal spring 100 and length of the sinusoidal spring period 150.
In this disclosure, the term “sinusoidal spring” refers to a spring with crests or troughs as opposed to other types of springs such as helical, conical, torsional, or clock springs. The term “sinusoidal” as used herein refers in the classic sense to a sinusoidal-type spring and not a helical, conical, torsional, or clock spring. A sinusoidal spring need not be in the shape of a true sinusoid or even a wave pattern, may be nonsymmetrical, or may have an irregular pattern. A sinusoidal spring, as used herein, may simply be a flat piece of spring or steel material formed into a pattern with crests or troughs. A sinusoidal spring may only require one or more sets of crests or troughs. For example, a sinusoidal spring may have as few as one crest and two troughs or two crests and one trough. The crests and troughs may be any suitable shape or profile and may or may not be arranged in a sinusoidal or wave pattern.
The sinusoidal spring 100 may be made from any suitable flexible material such as spring steel, phosphor-bronze, Mylar (biaxially-oriented polyethylene terephthalate), aluminum, copper, epoxy impregnated carbon fiber, or resilient plastics. The material may be selected based on the desired mechanical properties such as stiffness or locking force, chemical properties such as corrosion resistance, or heat transfer properties.
The sinusoidal spring 100 may further include a handle 114. The handle 114 may be used to slide the sinusoidal spring 100 without tools along the sliding axis 360 between an unlocked and locked position, as will be described below. The handle 114 may be made from the same material as the sinusoidal spring 100 or may be made from another suitable material, such as rigid plastic, e.g., acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), acrylic, or other polymers, etc.
The sinusoidal spring width 154 may be on the order of an inch or a fraction of an inch. For example, the sinusoidal spring width 154 may be ¼, ½, 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, or more inches. Similarly, the sinusoidal spring width 154 may be equal, greater than, or less than the sinusoidal spring thickness.
In other embodiments, the slotted track 218 may be configured to hold more than one sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104. Additionally, two or more sinusoidal springs may move or operate independently from one another. Two or more sinusoidal springs 100, 102, or 104 in a slotted track 218 may provide a greater locking force than a single sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104.
In embodiments, the primary sinusoidal depression period 250 may be equal to the sinusoidal spring period 150. The primary sinusoidal depressions 210 have a depression depth 356 as measured relative to the primary sinusoidal plateau 212.
The lock bar 200 may also comprise a header 216 and an anchoring hole 217. In this embodiment, the header 216 may restrict movement of the sinusoidal spring along one direction of the sliding axis 360.
Referring to
The protrusions 220 may allow an operator to “snap” a sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104 into the slotted track 218 such that the sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104 is retained in the slotted track 218 by the protrusions 220. The protrusions may further allow the sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104 to move freely along the sliding axis 360 at least half a wavelength from a “locked” to an “unlocked” position or from an “unlocked” to a “locked” position. The protrusions 220 may be configured to secure the sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104 along the locking axis 362 yet allow the sinusoidal spring 100, 102, or 104 to move relative to the lock bar at least half a wavelength along the sliding axis 360.
A lock bar 200, 202, or 204 may be made of any suitable material such as plastic, e.g., acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), acrylic, or other polymers, etc. A lock bar 200, 202, or 204 may be made of metal, e.g., copper, aluminum, titanium, or steel, etc. A lock bar 200, 202, or 204 may be made of wood. The lock bar may be manufactured on a 3-D printer, injection molded, or milled etc.
In other embodiments, a “locked” spring lock may be one that has a sinusoidal spring positioned on top of a slotted track or on top of one or more plateaus of a lock bar. Additionally, an “unlocked” spring lock may be one that has a sinusoidal spring positioned inside a slotted track or inside the depressions of a lock bar.
Referring back to
The lock bar 200 or 202 may be configured to allow the sinusoidal spring 100 or 102 to move along the sliding axis 360 between an “unlocked” (
Referring now to
The lock bar 206 may include a removal component 215 with the detail illustrated in
The spring locks in
In
In
The change in thickness of the spring lock 400 or 402 between the configurations illustrated in
The compressive or locking force of the sinusoidal spring 100 or 102 against the lock bar 200 or 202, and thus the compressive or locking force of the spring lock 400 or 402, is a function of the number of nodes (labeled “n” in
Referring again to
The increased number of touch points between the sinusoidal spring 100 and the lock bar 200 as compared to the sinusoidal spring 102 and the lock bar 202 means that there may be greater locking friction along the sliding axis 360 for spring lock 400 as compared to spring lock 402. Increasing the number of touch points increases the potential locking force along the sliding axis 360 between the sinusoidal spring 100 or 102 and the lock bar 200 or 202 and thus the overall lock force of the spring lock 400 or 402 to lock a planar component 700 or 702 inside a channel 800 or 802.
The compressive force of the spring may be modified to increase or decrease the “locking” force of the spring lock 400 or 402 inside the channel 800 or 802. As described previously, increasing the number of nodes (illustrated in
A lock bar may include other features to secure a lock bar to a planar surface. For example,
In embodiments, a lock bar 208 may instead have threaded holes in lieu of retaining posts. The threaded holes may be configured to receive a bolt or machine screw that may be used to secure the lock bar 208 to a planar surface.
One could, for example, position a spring lock 404 in the unlocked position against a planar component 704 (e.g., a circuit board, metal plate, wood plate, etc.) inside a channel 804. The combined thickness of the spring lock 404 in an “unlocked” position and planar component 704 may be as great as the distance between the upper surface 812 and lower surface 822 of the channel 804. The unconstrained thickness of the spring lock 404 in a “locked” position and planar component 704 may be greater than the distance between the upper surface 812 and lower surface 822 of the channel 804. The lock bar 404 or the sinusoidal spring (not labeled) could be manually adjusted to the “locked” configuration, thus applying a spring force to the planar component 704 and the upper and lower walls 812 and 822 of the channel 804. The spring force applied to the planar component 704 and channel walls 812 and 822 along the locking axis 362 may establish a good thermal contact between the planar component 704 with the walls 812 and 822 (but more especially 822) of the channel 802. The spring lock 404 may be used in maintaining a circuit board within operational temperature boundaries or to secure an electrical component inside a housing to prevent the component from breaking connections with other cables or components in a system.
In an alternative method, the spring lock 404 may be attached to the circuit board 704 before the circuit board 704 and the spring lock 404 are slid into the chassis 840 in a single operation. As the circuit board 704 is slid all the way into the chassis 840, a header (not shown) at the end of the chassis channel presses the sinusoidal spring 104 along the sliding axis 360 such that the spring lock is in the “locked” configuration. The circuit board 704 may remain “locked” in the computer chassis 840 until a removal tool (not shown) is used to pull the lock bar 200, 204, 206, or 208 out of the channel (not labeled), using the removal component 215 (shown in
One operational aspect of a spring lock is positioning the spring lock in contact with the object or objects that need to be secured or clamped. Anchored or static surfaces may refer to the walls of a channel or adjustable jaws of a clamping device. Compressing a sinusoidal spring translates to applying a spring force to both the static surface and the secured object or planar surface. The spring force applied to the secured object assures a more uniform and effective mechanical and thermal contact between the secured object and the static surfaces.
The figures of the present application illustrate a planar surface or circuit board and a computer housing or chassis. Other suitable applications of a spring lock include woodworking clamps or work piece retention in factory automation. Many processes in factory automation include applying a constant force to objects to keep them from shifting or moving. The force is typically applied via electromechanical devices that require considerable amounts of energy and are inefficient. In woodworking, maintaining strong mechanical contact is useful in temporarily securing two wood pieces together while a glue bond cures or until one can permanently secure the pieces together with nails or screws. For circuit boards, good thermal contact may be important in allowing heat to transfer out of the circuit board in order to maintain the circuit board within operational temperatures.
It will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also, various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art, and are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
Claims
1. A spring lock comprising:
- a sinusoidal spring comprising:
- one or more crests and troughs formed along a length of the sinusodial spring, the length extending along a sliding axis, the one or more crests and troughs forming a sinusoidal spring profile; and
- a lock bar comprising a track extending along the sliding axis, the track configured to hold the sinusodial spring and allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis, the track comprising one or more depressions and plateaus, the depressions and plateaus forming a lock bar profile,
- wherein the spring lock is locked when the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are out-of-phase and the spring lock is unlocked when the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are in-phase.
2. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the sinusodial spring profile and the lock bar profile are regular and symmetric about a locking axis, the locking axis being perpindicular to the sliding axis.
3. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the sinusodial spring profile and the lock bar profile are non-symmetric about the locking axis, the locking axis being perpindicular to the sliding axis.
4. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the sinusodial spring profile and the lock bar profile are non-symmetric about the sliding axis.
5. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the track comprises walls defining a track width, the track width being slighly larger than a sinusoidal spring width.
6. The spring lock of claim 5, whereing the walls comprise one or more protrusions configured to retain the sinusoidal spring along a locking axis while allowing the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis, the locking axis being perpindicular to the sliding axis.
7. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the lock bar further comprises an anchoring block at one end of the lock bar, the anchoring block restricting the sinusoidal spring motion along the sliding axis.
8. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the lock bar further comprises a removal component.
9. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the one or more depressions form at least one primary sinusoidal depression and the one ore more plateaus form at least one primary sinusoidal plateau.
10. The spring lock of claim 9, wherein the track further comprises:
- at least two primary sinusoidal depressions forming a primary sinusoidal depression period;
- at least two primary sinusoidal plateaus forming a primary sinusoidal plateau period,
- wherein the primary sinusoidal depression period and the primary sinusoidal plateau period are substantially equal to the sinusoidal spring period.
11. The spring lock of claim 10, wherein the primary sinusoidal depression period is out-of-phase with the primary sinusoidal plateau period.
12. The spring lock of claim 10, wherein the at least two primary sinusoidal plateaus comprise at least two secondary sinusoidal depressions.
13. The spring lock of claim 1, wherein the one or more depressions form a primary sinusoidal depression and a secondary sinusoidal depression, the primary and secondary sinusoidal depressions configured to restrict the sinusoidal spring and lock bar from involuntarily shifting from a locked position to an unlocked position.
14. The spring lock of claim 13, wherein a secondary sinusoidal depression surface is configured to restrict motion of the sinusodial spring relative to the lock bar.
15. A method for securing a component between an upper static surface and a lower static surface, the method comprising:
- providing a sinusoidal spring having a sinusoidal spring period along a sliding axis, a sinusoidal amplitude along a locking axis, and a width along a lateral axis, wherein the sliding axis, locking axis and lateral axis are all perpendicular to one another;
- providing a lock bar comprising a track along the sliding axis, the track configured to allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis between an unlocked and a locked position;
- placing the sinusoidal spring, lock bar, and flat component between the upper static surface and the lower static surface; and
- moving the sinusoidal spring, relative to the lock bar, along the sliding axis from the unlocked to the locked position.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein a shortest distance between the upper static surface and the lower static surface:
- is greater than or equal to a combined unlocked profile thickness of the sinusoidal spring, lock bar, and flat component when the sinusoidal spring and the lock bar are in the unlocked position; and
- is less than a combined locked profile thickness of the sinusoidal spring, lock bar, and flat component when the sinusoidal spring and the lock bar are in the locked position.
17. A spring lock comprising:
- a sinusoidal spring having: one or more crests or troughs along a locking axis, the crests or troughs forming a sinusoidal spring profile, a length along a sliding axis, and a width along a lateral axis, wherein the sliding axis, locking axis and lateral axis are all perpendicular to one another;
- a lock bar comprising a track along the sliding axis, the track comprising one or more depressions or plateaus, the depressions or plateaus forming a lock bar profile;
- wherein the sinusoidal spring profile and the lock bar profile are configured to be in-phase or out-of-phase with respect to each other.
18. The spring lock of claim 17, wherein the lock bar is configured to allow the sinusoidal spring to move along the sliding axis to change the spring lock between the unlocked and locked positions.
19. The spring lock of claim 17, wherein the lock bar is configured to restrict motion of the sinusoidal spring along the lateral axis.
20. The spring lock of claim 19, wherein the lock bar further comprises an anchoring block at one end of the lock bar, the anchoring block configured to restrict the sinusoidal spring motion along one direction of the sliding axis.
Type: Application
Filed: May 3, 2013
Publication Date: Nov 6, 2014
Applicant: Utah State University Research Foundation (North Logan, UT)
Inventors: Morgan E. Davidson (River Heights, UT), Mike S. Watson (North Logan, UT)
Application Number: 13/887,128
International Classification: H01R 12/70 (20060101); H01R 43/00 (20060101);