Pluggable Connectors

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
10142501-001C-TRLF

10142501-001C-TRLF

Storage & Server IO (Amphenol ICC)

SAS 4.0 24G VERTICAL, SMT

833

2170704-3

2170704-3

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN QSFP28 CAGE W/HSINK R/A

448

0674901230

0674901230

Woodhead - Molex

CONN SATA HEADER 7POS SLD RA SMD

0

1888174-6

1888174-6

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN MINI SAS RCPT 36POS SLD SMD

0

GT17VC-8DP-DS-SB

GT17VC-8DP-DS-SB

Hirose

CONN AUTO LAN PLUG 8POS SLD R/A

0

0877011001

0877011001

Woodhead - Molex

CONN SATA RCPT 22P PRESSFIT PCB

70

788862-1

788862-1

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN XFP RCPT 30POS SLD R/A SMD

501

SS-79100-001

SS-79100-001

Stewart Connector

CONN SFP+ CAGE PRESS-FIT R/A

124

2170112-2

2170112-2

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN QSFP+ CAGE W/HSINK PRESS RA

142

1-2007562-5

1-2007562-5

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN SFP+ RCP W/CAGE 2X6 240P RA

93

2007456-4

2007456-4

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN QSFP+ CAGE 1X3 W/HSINK R/A

0

GT17VB-6DP-DS(71)

GT17VB-6DP-DS(71)

Hirose

CONN AUTO LAN PLUG 6POS SLD R/A

0

FS1-S01-146E1

FS1-S01-146E1

Storage & Server IO (Amphenol ICC)

CONN MINI SAS CAGE SLD R/A SMD

0

10031077-001LF

10031077-001LF

Storage & Server IO (Amphenol ICC)

CONN SAS RCPT 29POS PRESSFIT PCB

0

0470804001

0470804001

Woodhead - Molex

CONN SATA PLUG 7POS SLD R/A SMD

11

2274842-2

2274842-2

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN CFP2 CAGE W/HSINK R/A

0

1-2007394-5

1-2007394-5

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN SFP+ RCP W/CAGE 2X4 160P RA

405

1888174-2

1888174-2

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN MINI SAS RCPT 36POS SLD SMD

347

10045105-001LF

10045105-001LF

Storage & Server IO (Amphenol ICC)

CONN SAS PLUG 29POS SLD SMD

0

1735284-2

1735284-2

TE Connectivity AMP Connectors

CONN SATA RCPT 22POS SLD SMD

1959

Pluggable Connectors

1. Overview

Pluggable connectors are modular electronic interfaces enabling rapid connection/disconnection of circuits in high-speed data transmission systems. As critical components in modern communication infrastructure, they support hot-swapping capabilities while maintaining signal integrity. These connectors serve as standardized interfaces between devices, cables, and PCBs, playing essential roles in telecommunications, data centers, and industrial automation.

2. Major Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
Fiber Optic ConnectorsSupports 10Gbps-400Gbps transmission, LC/MPO interfaces, low insertion lossData center backbone networks
Copper Cage ConnectorsShielded modular design, supports 1Gbps-100Gbps, thermal management featuresSwitch/router panel interfaces
High-Speed BackplaneDifferential pair architecture, impedance-controlled, multi-gigabit per laneTelecom equipment chassis
M12/X-coded ConnectorsIndustrial Ethernet, IP67 rated, vibration-resistantFactory automation systems

3. Structure and Components

Typical pluggable connectors consist of: - Housing: Latch-equipped polymer casing (UL94 V-0 rated) - Contacts: Gold-plated phosphor bronze with 0.1-0.2N contact force - Insulation: High-temperature resistant PBT/GF materials - Termination: Solder tails or press-fit pins (10-40 positions) - Shielding: 360 EMI protection with drain wire connection - Keying: Mechanical polarization to prevent mismatch insertion

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterTypical ValueImportance
Contact Resistance5-20 m Directly affects power loss
Insulation Resistance>10^9 Safety and signal isolation
VSWR<1.5:1 @50GHzMicrowave signal integrity
Operating Temp-55 C to +125 CEnvironmental reliability
Mating Cycles500-1000 cyclesLifetime durability

5. Application Fields

  • Telecommunications: 5G base stations (eCPRI interfaces), DWDM systems
  • Data Centers: Top-of-Rack switches using QSFP28/OSFP modules
  • Industrial: PROFINET-enabled machinery with M12 connectors
  • Transportation: Automotive Ethernet in autonomous vehicles (100BASE-T1)
  • Medical: MRI machines requiring sterile electrical interfaces

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerKey ProductsSpecialization
Amphenol ICCOptiMux fiber arraysHigh-density optical
TE ConnectivityMATRIXall backplaneHarsh environment
MolexOSFP800 Series800Gbps solutions
SamtecFireFly optical enginesMid-board optical

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations: - Signal bandwidth requirements (Nyquist frequency calculation) - Environmental factors (temperature/humidity/chemical exposure) - Compliance with industry standards (IEEE 802.3bs, IEC 61076) - Termination method compatibility (SMT vs through-hole) - Cost vs performance trade-off (e.g., gold vs silver contacts) - Future-proofing (support for next-gen protocols)

8. Industry Trends

Current development directions include: - 1.6Tbps+ optical interfaces using 100G per lane electrical design - EMI reduction through nano-coating and 3D shielding structures - Miniaturization driven by 5G small cells and IoT devices - Integrated magnetics in RJ45 connectors for PoE++ applications - Sustainable materials meeting REACH/RoHS regulations - Smart connectors with embedded diagnostics (IEEE 802.3ap)

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