The present invention relates to the field of wireless power transfer, and particularly to in-motion wireless power transfer systems for use in charging plug-in electric vehicles, and methods of operating the same.
Plug-in Electric Vehicles (PEV) utilize a battery to store energy and power an electric motor to provide propulsion. When the battery becomes depleted, a PEV must be recharged for a period of time. Recharging may be performed by plugging the vehicle into an outlet or wirelessly with a primary and secondary coil. Wireless power transfer (WPT) charging has the benefit of being effortless and is the only option for in-motion vehicle charging.
Examples of wireless power transfer devices are described in: U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2012/0043930 A1 published on Feb. 12, 2012 and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,310,202 on Nov. 13, 2012, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. Nos. 61/510,231, filed July 21, 2011; 61/510,210, filed Jul. 21, 2011; 61/510,206, filed Jul. 21, 2011; and 61/532,763, filed Sep. 9, 2011, each of which are incorporated herein by reference. Further, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/484,404 titled “REGULATION CONTROL AND ENERGY MANAGEMENT SCHEME FOR WIRELESS POWER TRANSFER” and filed on May 31, 2012 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/739,198 titled “WIRELESS POWER CHARGING USING POINT OF LOAD CONTROLLED HIGH FREQUENCY POWER CONVERTERS” and filed on Jan. 11, 2013 are incorporated herein by reference.
Referring to
The primary circuit includes a grid converter and a primary coil located in a primary pad. The secondary circuit is located in the vehicle and includes a secondary coil, a parallel tuning capacitor, a current rectification circuit connected to the secondary coil, and a battery connected to the current rectification circuit. The primary coil may include a single transmit coil or a plurality of transmit coils located at different pad locations as illustrated in
Optionally, a gateway system can be provided. The gateway system can be configured to receive information on the at least one parameter of the battery as transmitted by the vehicle-side communication means, and can be configured to transmit the information derived from the at least one parameter, directly or indirectly, to the output voltage controller. In one embodiment, the gateway system can employ internet.
Optionally, a grid-side communication means can be provided. The grid-side communication means can be configured to receive the information derived from the at least one parameter, and can be configured to relay the information derived from the at least one parameter to the output voltage controller.
Alternately or additionally, direct short range communication (DSRC) can be employed to provide feedback on the battery voltage Ub, the battery current Ib, battery management system (BMS) messages, faults, sensor inputs, and status between the vehicle and the charging facility. The information can be employed to control the switching frequency and duty cycle control in the primary circuit and to provide power factor (PF) compensation.
Most in-motion wireless power transfer systems are expected to be installed on high ways as shown in
An energy buffer including an electrochemical capacitor can be added to the primary circuit and/or to the secondary circuit of in-motion wireless power transfer system. The energy buffer(s) can smooth the power delivered by the power grid and captured by a vehicle passing over an array of transmit coils through in-motion wireless power transfer. The reduction in the transient power transfer can reduce the peak current that flows through various components of the in-motion wireless power transfer system including a vehicle battery on the vehicle, and prolong the life of the in-motion wireless power transfer system.
The energy buffer employs a fast response electrochemical energy storage system employing an electrochemical capacitor, which can be installed on the grid (transmit) side and/or the battery (receiver) side of the wireless power transfer system. Electrochemical capacitors have extremely high power densities, can handle extremely high currents, have very low internal resistances, and have very high cycling efficiencies. Therefore, by utilizing the ultra-capacitors, it can be provided that vehicle battery is not subject to receive peak and sharp power variations, the stress on the battery can be reduced, and prolonged battery lifetime can be achieved.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, a receiver circuit for wireless power transfer is provided. The receiver circuit includes a receiver coil and a receiver capacitor connected to the receiver coil; a rectifier circuit configured to receive a voltage across the receiver capacitor as an input and to generate an output voltage including a direct current component and an alternating current (AC) ripple component; an electrochemical capacitor directly or indirectly connected to the output voltage; and a vehicle battery directly or indirectly connected to the output voltage.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a method of operating a receiver circuit for wireless power transfer in an electric vehicle is provided. The method includes providing a vehicle equipped with a receiver circuit that includes a receiver coil and a receiver capacitor connected to the receiver coil; a rectifier circuit configured to receive a voltage across the receiver capacitor as an input and to generate an output voltage including a direct current component and an alternating current (AC) ripple component; an electrochemical capacitor directly or indirectly connected to the output voltage; and a vehicle battery directly or indirectly connected to the output voltage. The method further includes the steps of: causing the vehicle to pass over a track of transmit pads including transmit coils and storing energy received from the transmit coils through wireless power transfer in the electrochemical capacitor; and transferring energy stored in the electrochemical capacitor into the vehicle battery after the vehicle exits a region overlying the track of transmit pads.
According to yet another aspect of the present disclosure, a transmitter circuit for wireless power transfer is provided. The transmitter circuit includes an active front end (AFE) unit including input nodes configured to be connected to alternating current (AC) power from a power grid and output nodes configured to provide a unipolar output voltage; a high frequency inverter configured to convert the unipolar output voltage or a direct current (DC) voltage derived from the unipolar output voltage into an AC output voltage in a frequency range from 1 kHz to 1 MHz; at least one set of a primary coil and a primary capacitor connected to the high frequency inverter; and an electrochemical capacitor connected to nodes between the power grid and the high frequency inverter.
According to still another aspect of the present disclosure, a method of operating a transmitter circuit for wireless power transfer is provided. The method includes providing a transmitter circuit that includes an active front end (AFE) unit including input nodes configured to be connected to alternating current (AC) power from a power grid and output nodes configured to provide a unipolar output voltage; a high frequency inverter configured to convert the unipolar output voltage or a direct current (DC) voltage derived from the unipolar output voltage into an AC output voltage in a frequency range from 1 kHz to 1 MHz; at least one set of a primary coil and a primary capacitor connected to the high frequency inverter; and an electrochemical capacitor connected to nodes between the power grid and the high frequency inverter. The at least one primary coil is located within a track of at least one transmit pad. The method further includes the steps of storing energy in said electrochemical capacitor while the at least one primary coil does not perform wireless power transfer; and transferring energy stored in the electrochemical capacitor into the high frequency inverter while wireless power transfer is performed from the at least one primary coil to an electric vehicle passing over the track of at least one transmit pad.
As stated above, the present invention relates to stationary and dynamic wireless power chargers for use in charging plug-in electric vehicles, and methods of operating the same, which is now described in detail with accompanying figures. The drawings are not drawn to scale.
As used herein, “wireless power transfer” or “WPT” refers to the transmission of electrical energy from a power source to an electrical load through an inductive coupling between a primary coil and a secondary coil.
As used herein, a “grid converter” herein refers to a device that takes alternating current (AC) supply voltage having a frequency less than 1 kHz and generated alternating current (AC) supply voltage having a frequency greater than 1 kHz.
As used herein, an “electrochemical capacitor” refers to any capacitor selected from a class of capacitors that includes electric double-layer capacitors, electric multi-layer capacitors, ultracapacitors, supercapacitors, lithium-ion capacitors (LiC), lead acid battery capacitors, ultrabatteries that integrate a lead acid battery capacitor with a supercapcitor, and other equivalent actively or passively controlled energy storage systems that can provide fast response within a time scale of microseconds as known in the art currently or in the future. An electrochemical capacitor as referred herein can be a single electrochemical capacitor or a plurality of electrochemical capacitors in a parallel connection and/or in a series connection.
As used herein, an “active front end unit” or an “AFE unit” refers to a unit including a grid converter and optionally configured to provide power factor compensation control to minimize power loss during wireless power transfer.
As used herein, a ‘DC-DC” converter is a converter that uses a unipolar voltage as an input and generates DC power as an output. The power input may include alternating current (AC) ripples having a magnitude less than ½ of the magnitude of the DC component.
As used herein, a “unipolar” voltage refers to a voltage of which the polarity does not change as a function of time.
An electrochemical capacitor can be added to the grid side circuit (transmitter circuit) and/or the vehicle side circuit (receiver circuit) to smoothen the power delivered by the power grid and captured by the vehicle for in-motion (dynamic) wireless power transfer. The electrochemical capacitors reduce the battery and grid power peaks by providing a fast response to temporarily store energies provided by transient signals.
Wireless charging of plug-in vehicles (PEV's) is already attractive to customers because of convenience, safety and flexibility. Wireless charging is convenient because of no need for cable and plug connections. Wireless power transfer (WPT) systems are safe because there is inherently no leakage current between the vehicle and the earth due to the charging function. Wireless charging provides flexibility because the on-board charging system makes dual use of an on-board-charger (OBC).
For wireless in-motion charging systems, high battery current ripples and high stress on the grid current may cause a technical challenge or barrier in commercialization of this technology. The missing piece to the wireless in-motion power transfer system is the capability to supply/deliver high power without putting additional stressing neither to the power grid nor to the vehicle battery. The present disclosure provides such a capability to deliver high power without causing stress to the power grid or to the vehicle battery. The present disclosure provides a fully autonomous means of smoothing the grid current and battery current with the aid of a fast-response electrochemical capacitor based energy storage system.
Smoothing the grid current makes economical sense since it helps avoid tripping the protection equipment and eliminates potential outages to the additional burden that may be introduced by the pulsating high power demanded by the wireless power transfer system. From the traction battery perspective, wireless power transfer system already introduces reduced size battery packs since the vehicles can be recharged as they are driven. Addition of a fast response electrochemical capacitor ensures that the battery current ripples can be eliminated and the vehicle battery can be recharged relatively slower by using the high burst of power received by the electrochemical capacitor in a short period of time. The present disclosure furthermore avoids any battery lifetime reductions that may be due to the high current ripples or relatively fast charging for a short period of time.
Employing fast response electrochemical capacitors based energy storage buffers have never been applied for wireless power transfer systems. Particularly for in-motion wireless applications, using electrochemical capacitor energy storage systems for the purpose of grid support or vehicle battery current ripple reduction can enable use of a high power capable buffer available for both transmit and receive sides of the system. Both transmitter side and the receiver side have component that are relatively sensitive to the fast transients or high current ripples.
The present disclosure provides various interconnection topologies for the electrochemical capacitor energy storage systems. Both the grid interaction methods and the hybridization configurations of electrochemical capacitor energy storage systems with the existing vehicle batteries are disclosed herein.
Referring to
In order to make the grid current smoother, an electrochemical capacitor can be interfaced to the grid side before, or after, an active front end unit (AFE unit). The AFE unit is a rectifier and power factor compensator (represented as “Active Front End (AFE) and PF Comp” in
The grid side circuit includes an active front end (AFE) unit, a high frequency power converter, and a series connection of a transmit capacitor (primary capacitor) and a transmit coil (primary coil) located in each transmit pad (primary pad). The vehicle includes a high frequency receiver coil (which is a secondary coil), a rectifier and filter circuit, and a vehicle battery.
The AFE unit, i.e., an AFE converter, is connected to a utility power supply, and provides power factor correction. The AFE unit generates a unipolar output voltage Udo, which has the same polarity relative to electrical ground during the operation of the AFE unit. For example, the unipolar output voltage may be non-negative (positive or zero) at all times, or non-positive (negative or zero) at all times.
The AFE unit may include only passive rectification devices (such as diodes), or may include rectification devices with active electronic control. If the AFE unit includes rectification devices with active electronic control, the control signals may be provided by the output power controller. In one embodiment, the rectification devices with active electronic control may include thyristors configured to be controlled through input voltages. In one embodiment, additional electronic components such as capacitors may be provided to stabilize the unipolar output voltage Udo. Thus, the unipolar output voltage Udo may vary with twice the frequency of the grid power supply voltage Uac (i.e., at 120 Hz), or may be substantially constant through voltage stabilizing electronic components (such as capacitors—not shown), or may have a substantially constant direct current (DC) component and a superposed ripple having twice the frequency of the grid power supply voltage Uac.
Various transmitter circuits for wireless power transfer are provided according to embodiments of the present disclosure. The transmitter circuits of the present disclosure include an active front end (AFE) unit, a high frequency inverter, at least one set of a primary coil and a primary capacitor, and an electrochemical capacitor. The AFE unit includes input nodes configured to be connected to alternating current (AC) power from a power grid and output nodes configured to provide a unipolar output voltage. The high frequency inverter is configured to convert the unipolar output voltage or a direct current (DC) voltage derived from the unipolar output voltage into an AC output voltage. In one embodiment, the AC output voltage can be in a frequency range from 1 kHz to 1 MHz, although lesser and greater frequencies can also be employed. Each of the at least one set of a primary coil and a primary capacitor can be connected to the high frequency inverter. The electrochemical capacitor is connected to nodes between the power grid and the high frequency inverter.
The various transmitter circuits of the present disclosure can be operated in the following manner. A transmitter circuit of the present disclosure can be provided such that the at least one primary coil is located within a track of at least one transmit pad. Energy can be stored in the electrochemical capacitor while the at least one primary coil does not perform wireless power transfer. The energy stored in the electrochemical capacitor can be transferred into the high frequency inverter while wireless power transfer is performed from the at least one primary coil to an electric vehicle passing over the track of at least one transmit pad.
Referring to
A bidirectional rectifier/inverter includes first nodes connected directly to the input nodes of the AFE unit and second nodes connected directly across nodes of the electrochemical capacitor. As used herein, a rectifier/inverter refers to a device configured to operate as a rectifier in one mode, and as an inverter in another mode. In this embodiment, the bidirectional rectifier/inverter is configured to operate as a rectifier employing the first nodes as input nodes and employing the first nodes as output nodes while the at least one set is not loaded with electrical current. Further, the bidirectional rectifier/inverter is configured to operate as an inverter employing the second nodes as input nodes and employing the first nodes as output nodes while the at least one set is loaded with electrical current. During the operation of the first exemplary transmitter circuit, the bidirectional rectifier/inverter can be operated as a rectifier employing the first nodes as input nodes and employing the first nodes as output nodes while the at least one primary coil does not perform wireless power transfer, and the bidirectional rectifier/inverter can be operated as an inverter employing the second nodes as input nodes and employing the first nodes as output nodes while the at least one primary coil performs wireless power transfer.
The electrochemical capacitor energy storage system of the present disclosure can be a single electrochemical capacitor, or can be a series connection of a plurality of electrochemical capacitors, or can be parallel connection of a plurality of electrochemical capacitors, or can be a combination of at least one series connection and at least one parallel connection of electrochemical capacitors. While the term “electrochemical capacitor” is employed to describe the present invention, it is understood that the electrochemical capacitor refers to an electrochemical capacitor energy storage system that can include one or more electrochemical capacitors in (a) parallel connection(s) and/or (a) series connection(s).
The electrochemical capacitor of the present disclosure can have a capacitance grater than 1 Farad. In one embodiment, the electrochemical capacitor of the present disclosure can have a capacitance greater than 10 Farad. In another embodiment, the electrochemical capacitor of the present disclosure can have a capacitance greater than 50 Farad. In yet another embodiment, the electrochemical capacitor of the present disclosure can have a capacitance in a range from 100 Farad to 10,000 Farad, although lesser and greater capacitances can also be employed.
In the grid side electrochemical capacitor interconnection scheme illustrated in
In the rectifier mode, the internal diodes of the bidirectional rectifier/inverter function as actively controlled switches. For positive half-line cycle of the AC grid voltage, D1 and D4 turn on and D2 and D3 turn off, whereas for the negative half-line cycle of the AC grid voltage, D2 and D3 turn on and D1 and D4 turn off. Then, as soon as a vehicle starts passing through the primary coil, the bidirectional converter is operated in the inverter mode. In this mode, EC is discharged with a high pulse power so that the charging power required for the car is not supplied from the grid but it comes from the electrochemical capacitor through the bidirectional rectifier/inverter that functions as an inverter. In inverter mode, a sinusoidal pulse width modulation (PSM) switching control strategy can be used to control the pair of switches T1 and T4 and the pair of switches T2 and T3 to supply a sinusoidal current in phase with the grid voltage. This current from the electrochemical capacitor is supplied at a high magnitude for a short duration of time that accommodates the charging power of the vehicle.
Referring to
The high frequency inverter turns on and off a series of transistors such that output voltage of the high frequency inverter includes a fundamental mode of the output voltage at the operational frequency of the primary coil. In this configuration, a bidirectional DC-DC converter is utilized and the electrochemical capacitor is moved from the AC side to the DC side of the transmitter circuit (primary circuit) instead of using a bidirectional rectifier/inverter employed in
Referring to
Referring to
A combination of an electrochemical capacitor energy storage system and a cascaded DC-DC converter is inserted at the DC link between the output nodes of an AFE unit and input nodes of a high frequency inverter. In this case, the electrochemical capacitor and the DC-DC converter are in a cascaded configuration, and is located between the output nodes of the AFE unit and the input nodes of the high frequency inverter. In this scheme, the DC-DC converter may, or may not be, a bidirectional DC-DC converter. Thus, savings in cost and size are possible by employing a unidirectional DC-DC converter instead of a bidirectional DC-DC converter.
In addition to, or in lieu of, an electrochemical capacitor energy storage system that is added to the primary circuit (transmitter circuit), another electrochemical capacitor energy storage system can be added to a secondary circuit (receiver circuit) of a vehicle. Various configurations can be employed to provide vehicle side energy buffering with the aid of an electrochemical capacitor.
Various receiver circuits for wireless power transfer are provided according to embodiments of the present disclosure. The receiver circuits of the present disclosure include a receiver coil and a receiver capacitor connected to the receiver coil; a rectifier circuit configured to receive a voltage across the receiver capacitor as an input and to generate an output voltage including a direct current component and an alternating current (AC) ripple component; an electrochemical capacitor directly or indirectly connected to the output voltage; and a vehicle battery directly or indirectly connected to the output voltage.
The various receiver circuits of the present disclosure can be operated in the following manner. A vehicle equipped with a receiver circuit of the present disclosure is provided. The vehicle is caused to pass over a track of transmit pads including transmit coils and energy received from the transmit coils through wireless power transfer is stored in the electrochemical capacitor. The energy stored in the electrochemical capacitor is transferred into the vehicle battery after the vehicle exits a region overlying the track of transmit pads.
Referring to
In this case, the high power pulse received by the secondary coils during passage of the vehicle over primary coils (transmitter coils) is rectified by the bridge rectifier, and is applied to the DC link. Due to a relatively high impedance of the electrochemical capacitor at the operational frequency of the WPT system compared to the impedance of the DC-DC converter, the electrochemical capacitor receives the high frequency charging pulses and stores electrical energy therein. When the vehicle completes its passage over WPT pad tracks, the discharge of energy from the electrochemical capacitor can be controlled by the DC-DC converter in such a way that enables slow recharging the battery over a period of time that is longer than the time it takes for the vehicle to pass over the WPT pad tracks.
Referring to
Referring to
During operation of the third exemplary receiver circuit, energy is transferred from the rectifier circuit through the bidirectional DC-DC converter into the electrochemical capacitor while the vehicle passes over the track of transmit pads, which causes the series connection of the transmit coil and the primary capacitor to be loaded with electrical current. Further, energy is transferred from the electrochemical capacitor through the bidirectional DC-DC converter into the vehicle battery after the vehicle exits the region overlying the track of transmit pads, which causes the series connection of the transmit coil and the primary capacitor not to be loaded with electrical current. Thus, the electrochemical capacitor is charged with a high power pulse when the vehicle moves over WPT pads. Once the electrical charges accumulate in the electrochemical capacitor and the vehicle moves away from the WPT pads, the bidirectional DC-DC converter controls the discharge of the electrochemical capacitor so as to slowly recharge the vehicle battery over a time scale that is longer than the time needed for a vehicle to pass over the primary pads.
The configuration of
In this configuration, the nominal voltage across the electrochemical capacitor can be higher than the nominal voltage across the battery so that the electrochemical capacitor can be recharged during a boost mode operation, the electrochemical capacitor can be discharged during a buck mode operation. In one embodiment, if the nominal voltage across the electrochemical capacitor is selected to be less than the nominal voltage of the battery, the bidirectional DC-DC converter can be reversed. In this case, a buck mode of operation (voltage step-down) is employed to convert the voltage from DC link to the voltage across the electrochemical capacitor, and a boost mode operation (voltage step-up) can be employed to convert the voltage from the electrochemical capacitor to the voltage applied across the DC link.
The bidirectional DC-DC converter can include two switching devices (T1 and T2) including their respective internal diodes and a converter inductor LC. From the DC link to the electrochemical capacitor, inductor LC, switch T2, and diode D2 form a boost converter that charges the electrochemical capacitor from the DC link. When an electric vehicle starts passing over transmit coils, a power flow is sensed at the DC link at the rectifier output. In the boost mode operation, power transfer triggers the controller so that T1 is operated in a pulse width modulation (PWM) mode (i.e., continuously switched on and off at a duty cycle d) while T2 is kept turned off. When T1 is turned on, the LC inductor is energized by the DC link voltage (i.e., while shorting DC link with respect to LC through T1). When T1 is turned off, both the energized LC inductor and the DC link supply power to the electrochemical capacitor through the diode D2.
Once the electric vehicle moves away from the transmit coils, a relatively slow process of recharging the vehicle battery commences, which transfers the energy stored in the electrochemical capacitor to the vehicle battery. This time, the converter is operated in the buck mode operation. In this case, T2, D1, and LC, form a buck converter from the electrochemical capacitor to the DC link, which is directly connected the vehicle battery terminals. In the buck mode operation, T1 is kept off all the time, and T2 is operated in a pulse width modulation (PWM) mode (i.e., continuously switched on and off at a duty cycle d*). When T2 is turned on, the electrochemical capacitor discharges to the DC link while energizing the LC (so that the voltage drop occurs across the converter inductor LC. When T2 is turned off, the electrochemical capacitor does not supply power to the DC link, but stored energy in the previously energized inductors keeps delivering power to the DC link until the stored power is depeleted. This allows discharging the electrochemical capacitor and recharging the vehicle battery in the buck mode operation. In one embodiment, upper and lower limits for the voltage across the electrochemical capacitor, i.e., UEC
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While the invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments, it is evident in view of the foregoing description that numerous alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Each of the embodiments described herein can be implemented individually or in combination with any other embodiment unless expressly stated otherwise or clearly incompatible. Other suitable modifications and adaptations of a variety of conditions and parameters normally encountered in image processing, obvious to those skilled in the art, are within the scope of this invention. All publications, patents, and patent applications cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent, or patent application were specifically and individually indicated to be so incorporated by reference. Accordingly, the invention is intended to encompass all such alternatives, modifications and variations which fall within the scope and spirit of the invention and the following claims.
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/027578 | 2/25/2013 | WO | 00 |