This invention relates generally to a converter, particularly though not solely, to a converter for an inductive power receiver.
Electrical converters are found in many different types of electrical systems. Generally speaking, a converter converts a supply of a first type to an output of a second type. Such conversion can include DC-DC, AC-AC and DC-AC electrical conversions. In some configurations a converter may have any number of DC and AC ‘parts’, for example a DC-DC converter might incorporate an AC-AC converter stage in the form of a transformer.
One example of the use of converters is in inductive power transfer (IPT) systems. IPT systems are a well-known area of established technology (for example, wireless charging of electric toothbrushes) and developing technology (for example, wireless charging of handheld devices on a ‘charging mat’).
IPT systems will typically include an inductive power transmitter and an inductive power receiver. The inductive power transmitter includes a transmitting coil or coils, which are driven by a suitable transmitting circuit to generate an alternating magnetic field. The alternating magnetic field will induce a current in a receiving coil or coils of the inductive power receiver. The received power may then be used to charge a battery, or power a device or some other load associated with the inductive power receiver. Further, the transmitting coil and/or the receiving coil may be connected to a resonant capacitor to create a resonant circuit. A resonant circuit may increase power throughput and efficiency at the corresponding resonant frequency.
However currently available inductive power receivers may still suffer from having large component counts, and/or large component foot prints. Accordingly, the present invention may provide an improved inductive power receiver or may provide the public with a useful choice.
According to an example embodiment there is provided an inductive power receiver comprising:
It is acknowledged that the terms “comprise”, “comprises” and “comprising” may, under varying jurisdictions, be attributed with either an exclusive or an inclusive meaning. For the purpose of this specification, and unless otherwise noted, these terms are intended to have an inclusive meaning—i.e. they will be taken to mean an inclusion of the listed components which the use directly references, and possibly also of other non-specified components or elements.
Reference to any documents in this specification does not constitute an admission that those documents are prior art or form part of the common general knowledge.
The accompanying drawings which are incorporated in and constitute part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the general description of the invention given above, and the detailed description of embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention, in which:
An inductive power transfer (IPT) system 1 is shown generally in
The IPT system includes an inductive power transmitter 2 and an inductive power receiver 3. The inductive power transmitter 2 is connected to an appropriate power supply 4 (such as mains power or a battery). The inductive power transmitter 2 may include transmitter circuitry having one or more of a converter 5, e.g., an AC-DC converter (depending on the type of power supply used) and an inverter 6, e.g., connected to the converter 5 (if present). The inverter 6 supplies a transmitting coil or coils 7 with an AC signal so that the transmitting coil or coils 7 generate an alternating magnetic field. In some configurations, the transmitting coil or coils 7 may be separate from the inverter 6. The transmitting coil or coils 7 may be connected to capacitors (not shown) either in parallel or series to create a resonant circuit.
A controller 8 is provided to control operation of the inductive power transmitter 2 and may be directly or indirectly connected to several or all parts of the transmitter 2. The controller 8 receives inputs from the various operational components of the inductive power transmitter 2 and produces outputs that control that operation. The controller 8 may be implemented as a single unit or separate units, configured to control various aspects of the inductive power transmitter 2 depending on its capabilities, including for example: power flow, tuning, selectively energising transmitting coil or coils 7, inductive power receiver detection and/or communications.
The inductive power receiver 3 includes a power pick-up stage 9 connected to power conditioning circuitry 10 that in turn supplies power to a load 11. The load may be an electrically operational part of an electronic device or machine, or may be one or more power storage elements. The power pick-up stage 9 includes inductive power receiving coil or coils. When the coils of the inductive power transmitter 2 and the inductive power receiver 3 are suitably coupled, the alternating magnetic field generated by the transmitting coil or coils 7 induces an alternating current in the receiving coil or coils. The receiving coil or coils may be connected to capacitors and additional inductors (not shown) either in parallel, series or some other combination, such as inductor-capacitor-inductor, to create a resonant circuit. In some inductive power receivers, the receiver may include a controller 12 which may control tuning of the receiving coil or coils, operation of the power conditioning circuitry 10, characteristics of the load 11 and/or communications.
The term “coil” may include an electrically conductive structure where an electrical current generates a magnetic field. For example inductive “coils” may be electrically conductive wire in three dimensional shapes or two dimensional planar shapes, electrically conductive material fabricated using printed circuit board (PCB) techniques into three dimensional shapes over plural PCB ‘layers’, and other coil-like shapes. Other configurations may be used depending on the application. The use of the term “coil”, in either singular or plural, is not meant to be restrictive in this sense.
Current induced in the power pick-up stage 9 by transmitting coil or coils 7 will typically be high frequency AC at the frequency of operation of the transmitting coil or coils 7, which may be for example, 20 kHz, up to hundreds of megahertz or higher. The power conditioning circuitry 10 is configured to convert the induced current into a form that is appropriate for powering or charging the load 11, and may perform for example power rectification, power regulation, or a combination of both.
During a first part-cycle, which can be referred to as the “rectification part-cycle” and which may be approximately a half period in duration, the voltage generated by power pick-up stage 203 is greater than Vout, which is the voltage appearing across DC output capacitor 204. This means that VS, the voltage appearing across MOSFET 205 and its body diode 206, is negative. As such, current flows through the parallel combination of MOSFET 205 and body diode 206 and through to the power pick-up stage 203. To complete the circuit, current also flows from the power pick-up stage 203 to load 207 and DC output capacitor 204, which are connected in parallel.
During a second part-cycle, which can be referred to as the “regulation part-cycle” and which may be approximately a half period in duration, the voltage generated by power pick-up stage 203 is less than Vout, the voltage present on DC output capacitor 204. Therefore, the voltage VS, appearing across MOSFET 205 and its body diode 206, is positive. If MOSFET 205 is configured, by controller 208, to be on, using MOSFET gate 209, for at least some of this regulation part-cycle, current will flow through MOSFET 205. To complete the circuit, current will also then flow from DC output capacitor 204 to power pick-up stage 203. By controlling
MOSFET 205 during this second part-cycle, the amount of power that is allowed to flow back from DC output capacitor 204 to power pick-up stage 203 can be adjusted.
Based on the descriptions of the rectification part-cycle and the regulation part-cycle given in the preceding paragraphs it is apparent that the net flow of current from the power pick-up stage 203 to DC load 207 can be controlled. Therefore, the DC output voltage can be regulated, for a variety of loading conditions and for a range of voltages received by the pick-up coil or coils (not shown) in power pick-up stage 203. In this way, half-wave rectification, as well as output voltage regulation, may be achieved by example power conditioning circuitry 202. Combining regulation and rectification in this way reduces the component count in the receiver, which may allow for a smaller footprint, reduce the total cost of the target device, improve efficiency and/or reduce heat generation due to reduced power losses in the componentry.
A variety of alternative forms of the example power conditioning circuitry of
For example, a simple variation to example inductive power receiver 201 of
A number of alternative switch type current control elements may be used in example power conditioning circuitry 202 of
The circuit topology for power pick-up stage 203 in
The example inductive power receiver 301 further has example power conditioning circuitry 305 which has a current control element, illustrated as a switch 306 and associated diode 307, which functions in similar fashion to the afore-described example power conditioning circuitry. Typically in inductive power transfer systems with parallel tuned power pick-up stages, a second inductor will be used in addition to the pick-up inductor, in order to maintain a more constant current flow out of the parallel tuned tank, or otherwise in some way avoid exposing the parallel tuned tank to non-linear loading. This extra inductor is typically desirable because without it, non-linear load elements such as a bridge rectifier may inhibit the resonance of a parallel tuned power pick-up stage. By reducing this non-linearity, an additional inductance can help to increase the quality factor of the resonance of the LC tank and can therefore help increase the power output and efficiency of the system.
However, in the case of the circuit shown in
Referring once again to
A first switch control method will be illustrated using example inductive power receiver 301 of
At any point during the rectification part-cycle, the switch may be turned on again, thus allowing current to flow through the switch rather than just diode 307 and resetting the system to its initially described state, ready for the start of the next regulation cycle. By making waiting period t1 shorter, output voltage Vout will increase, as less current is allowed to flow back from DC output capacitor 308 to parallel connected L-C power pick-up stage 302. Conversely, by making t1 longer, output voltage Vout will decrease. A proportional integral (PI) or similar controller can be applied to ensure the desired output voltage set-point is reached. This switch control method has the advantage of zero voltage switch on and quasi zero voltage switch off, which helps to minimize switching losses.
A second switch control method will be illustrated using example inductive power receiver 201 of
In a third switch control method, MOSFET 205 of
In a fourth switch control method, the controller 208 of
A further variation, which can be can be applied to any of the switch control methods described, involves synchronous rectification during the rectification part-cycle. By sensing when the rectification part cycle has started, MOSFET 205 may be turned on so that current, rather than flowing through the body diode 206, is able to flow through MOSFET 205 itself, allowing for a lower voltage drop across MOSFET 205 and lower losses. When controller 208 determines, on the basis of waiting for an elapsed period, a phase sense signal or by some other means, that the rectification part-cycle is nearing an end, MOSFET 205 can be then set to the required state for the start of the upcoming regulation period. In this way, the total power loss on MOSFET 205 and body diode 206 may be minimized.
Adaptions of the switching methods described herein may be beneficial or required in cases where different power pick-up stages or power conditioning circuitry are used. It is understood by a person skilled in the art as to how the switching methods given can be adapted to work with these different hardware variants.
In some switch control embodiments, it is necessary to measure the phase of some aspect of the system in order to determine when to drive the switch on or off. For example, with the first switch control method, voltage phase information may be used to determine or estimate when the rectification and regulation part-cycles begin and end. This is illustrated with reference to
In
While one voltage comparison phase sense technique has been described here, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that a variety of different phase sensing techniques are known within the field of wireless or inductive power transfer. Many of these techniques could be applied to this circuit and to the related circuits described within this application, including but not limited to: zero voltage crossings, zero current crossings, the use of current sense transformers or resistors, use of an uncoupled phase sensing pick-up and use of a radio communications channel. In addition, while a purely hardware controller approach is taken in this example, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that other controllers such as microcontrollers, FPGAs, CPLDs, ASICs or other types of controller could also be used. Further, it may be possible to integrate significant parts of the entire wireless receiver circuit onto a single integrated circuit, including phase and voltage sensing circuits, control circuitry, gate driving circuits and power switches.
While the present invention has been illustrated by the description of the embodiments thereof, and while the embodiments have been described in detail, it is not the intention of the Applicant to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications will readily appear to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and method, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departure from the spirit or scope of the Applicant's general inventive concept.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NZ2016/050012 | 2/11/2016 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62115734 | Feb 2015 | US |