This invention generally to an inductive power transmitter.
IPT technology is used to transfer electrical energy from a transmitter coil to a receiver coil using magnetic field coupling between them. However, as there is usually a relatively large air gap between the transmitter and receiver coils, and magnetic energy drops off sharply with distance, the magnetic flux reaching the receiver coil from the transmitter coil is much weaker in IPT systems than in traditional tightly-coupled transformers and electric motors. This greatly limits the power transfer ability and efficiency of IPT systems.
Two techniques commonly used to increase the transfer efficiency are to increase the inverter frequency or to match the operating (i.e., resonant) frequency of the receiver to that of the transmitter side. To match the resonant frequencies, stabilizing the frequency of the transmitter may be desirable. However, when the transmitter inverter is resonant mode/soft switched, its frequency is usually not fixed and when the frequency of the inverter is fixed, it is usually not soft switching/resonant mode.
Varicaps are an example of a solution used in low power oscillating circuits to adjust the operating frequency allowing stabilisation of the frequency of an inverter or converter that has been soft switching, but they are not suitable for the higher voltages found in IPT circuits.
For example the inverter in International Patent Publication number WO2007/015651 is a push pull current fed resonant inverter for IPT. In that case it is soft switched but not fixed frequency. However prior art attempts to stabilise and/or adjust the frequency of such an inverter may suffer from additional complexity, higher losses, EMI problems, inflexibility in frequency and/or bulkiness.
In general terms in a first aspect one or more voltage controlled variable capacitors may be introduced into a switch mode resonant inverter. This may have the advantage that the inverter becomes a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) and/or that the frequency of an inductive power transmitter can be adjusted.
In a second aspect the operating frequency of an IPT inverter may be controlled with a Phase Locked Loop (PLL). A PLL would not be expected to work in a power electronics circuit as the voltages and currents are too high, being of the order to several tens of Volts and several hundreds of milliAmps, for such lower power components. This may have the advantage that the operating frequency of an inductive power transmitter may be stabilised through the feedback loop.
According to one example embodiment there is provided an inverter comprising at least two switching elements connected across a resonant circuit, the resonant circuit including an inductance in parallel with a capacitance, and wherein the inverter is configured to adjust the value of the capacitance based on a desired inverter operating frequency.
According to another example embodiment there is provided an inductive power transfer system comprising: an inverter, and a phase locked loop configured to control the operating frequency of the inverter.
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 prior art in this specification does not constitute an admission that such prior art forms 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.
An inductive power transfer (IPT) system has an inductive power transmitter and an inductive power receiver. The transmitter includes a power transmission element or elements, such as an inductive (primary) coil or coils, and the receiver includes a power receiving element or elements, such as an inductive (secondary) coil or coils. Power is transferred between these elements due to magnetic coupling of the elements. It is understood that the use of the term “coils” herein is meant to designate inductive “coils” in which electrically conductive wire is wound into a three dimensional coil shapes or two dimensional planar coil shapes, electrically conductive material is fabricated using printed circuit board (PCB) techniques into three dimensional coil shapes over plural PCB ‘layers’, and other coil-like shapes. The use of the term “coils” is not meant to be restrictive in this sense.
Figure shows 1 an example embodiment of an inductive power transmitter 10. The transmitter 10 has a negative feedback loop configured to improve the stability of the operating frequency. In the specific context of IPT systems, this may allow the operating frequency of the transmitter to be stabilised at the receiver resonant frequency in a simple, low cost, small, efficient, and/or flexible manner. In particular this may increase the efficiency of power transfer and/or increase the range of operating conditions. The establishment and control of operating and resonant frequencies in IPT systems is well understood by those skilled in the art, and therefore not discussed in detail herein. Depending on the application it may alternatively be desirable for the receiver to match its resonant frequency to that of the transmitter using an adaptation of the technique described below.
The negative feedback loop may be a modified phase locked loop. An error detector (in this case phase detector (PD) 12) compares a predetermined desired frequency to the operating frequency of the transmitter 10. The output of the PD 12 is filtered by a loop filter (in this case low pass filter (LF) 13). The filtered error voltage is then used to adjust the operating frequency of transmitting circuitry 15 of the transmitter 10. Components 11 & 14 will be discussed later.
An example of the transmitting circuitry 15 is shown in
In order that the filtered error voltage adjusts the operating frequency in the transmitting circuitry 15, the transmitting capacitor in the resonant circuit is an equivalent voltage control variable capacitor (EVCVC). The EVCVC capacitance can be controlled by an input voltage. As the transmitter operating frequency depends on the capacitance, this allows the transmitter to operate equivalently to a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO).
The EVCVC therefore enables the operating frequency of an inductive power transmitter to be adjusted in a simple, low cost, small, efficient, and/or flexible manner. In particular this may allow transmitter to adapt to the resonant frequency of multiple different receivers. For example the operating frequency may be manually switched between standard receiver resonant frequencies or it may be adapted in real-time, in response to a particular detected receiver. This may be done, for example, by detecting the identity of the receiver and using a lookup table, or by measuring the receiver resonant frequency directly.
For example the EVCVC may include the two capacitors 26, 28 in series and a diode 30 in parallel with the one capacitor 26. The filtered error voltage output 32 is provided at the positive terminal of the diode 30. The filtered error voltage output 32 thereby determines the equivalent value of the capacitance of the EVCVC. As is explained below, the higher the filtered error voltage output 32 is, the larger the equivalent capacitance of the EVCVC.
The two capacitors 26,28 together in series have a correspondingly lower capacitance than either of the capacitors individually. As such the higher the voltage on the positive terminal of the diode 30 is, the longer the diode 30 conducts. When the diode 30 conducts it shorts the capacitor 26, and therefore increases the effective capacitance to the capacitor 28.
This relationship has been simulated as shown in
Actually the instantaneous capacitance of the EVCVC switches between the above two discrete values, namely the capacitance of the capacitor 28 and the value of the capacitors 26,28 in series in accordance with the diode 30 to be conducting and to be not conducting. Thus the equivalent capacitance value is the average value which varies according the length of the conduction time of the diode compared to the non-conduction time i.e. the duty cycle.
Because the voltage at the negative terminal of the diode is AC (between 0V to π.VDC), the magnitude of the DC voltage at the positive terminal will be approximately proportional to the duty cycle of the conduction time.
The arrangement of the diode based EVCVC may be termed a passive switched capacitance. The capacitor may also be actively (or synchronously) switched using a transistor, depending on the application requirements.
The PD 12 and the LF 13 can be chosen by a person skilled in the art according to the application requirements, for example from low power signal processing components. For example phase comparator of the PLL chip CD4046BE can be used for the PD 12, and there are technical details in the datasheet of CD4046BE for designing the corresponding LF 13.
The two voltage and current matching circuits 11 & 14 mentioned earlier are used because the transmitting circuitry 15 is not a low power signal processing circuit like the PD 12 and the LF 13. In particular because the voltage and current ratings of the former are much larger than those of the later the voltage and current matching circuits 11 & 14 are needed in front of and behind the transmitting circuitry 15.
The inverter 20 may be a resonant inverter. For example it may be an autonomous push pull inverter or current fed push pull resonant inverter. In a particular embodiment,
For example a voltage attenuator and comparator 11 converts the real oscillating frequency of the inverter 60 continuously into a square wave. The DC supply voltage VDC may be 10-30V and the resonant voltage across the transmitter coil 24, is π times this, for example up to 100V. A set of voltage dividing resistors R3, R4, R5 and R6 attenuate the resonant voltage down to within the input voltage range of the comparator U1 eg: under 5V or lower. The square wave from U1 is therefore input to the PD 12 at a much lower magnitude.
The PD 12 compares this square wave with a fixed reference frequency input 62, and the LF 13 outputs a voltage of 0-5V which changes according to the difference of those frequencies.
The LF output voltage is not high enough to be used as the controlling voltage for the EVCVC which needs to be from 0V up to the peak voltage of the resonant circuit 22 to control the diode 30 to the maximum adjustable range. Depending on the fluctuation range of the frequency, the maximum value of the controlling voltage can be designed lower than the peak value of the voltage of the resonant circuit 22 as long as the fluctuating frequency can be adjusted back to the reference frequency. The general principle for determining the maximum value of the controlling voltage is that the higher the controlling voltage is, the larger the adjustable range of the frequency. Another factor which has an influence on the design of the maximum value of the controlling voltage is the resistance of the resistor R10. The larger the resistance of R10 is, the less the influence of the voltage at the emitter of the transistor Q2 is on the controlling voltage at the positive terminal of the diode 30. Also the adjustable range of the frequency can be enlarged by lowering the value of the resistor R10, however, the lower the value of the resistor R10 is, the more power it will consume.
The inverting voltage amplifier 14 in
Other voltage attenuator/comparator and inverting voltage amplifier circuits may be employed according to the application. For example they may be required to scale the voltage by a factor of between 2-20 times.
The inductive power transmitter may include a magnetically permeable element or core for the transmitting coil. The magnetically permeable core may be made from a ferrite material. When the transmitting coil is planar, the magnetically permeable core may be placed so that it is underneath the transmitting coil, or the transmitting coil may be wound around the magnetically permeable core itself.
The inductive power receiver may include a receiver resonant circuit. The receiver resonant circuit includes a receiving coil(s) and a receiver capacitor(s). The receiving coil and the receiver capacitor may be connected in parallel or in series to create a resonant circuit. The receiver resonant circuit will have a corresponding resonant frequency. As will be discussed in more detail later, the transmitter resonant circuit may be configured so that its resonant frequency matches the resonant frequency of the receiver resonant circuit.
There may be multiple transmitter resonant circuits and/or multiple receiver resonant circuits. For example, in a charging pad there may be an array of transmitting coils, which may each be connected to an associated resonant capacitor or other impedance element(s) for establishing resonant conditions in the circuit. Similarly in some portable devices there may be receiving coils located on different parts of the portable device Such transmitter resonant circuits may all be connected to the inverter 20, or they may each be connected with an associated inverter. It may be possible to selectively energise each or some of the transmitter resonant circuits and/or transmitting coils, and similarly the receiver mutatis mutandis.
Two points can be seen clearly from Table 1. Firstly, the frequency of the voltage of the resonant circuit follows the reference frequency which means the reference frequency has control over the frequency of the resonant circuit. Secondly, the higher the controlling voltage on the positive terminal of the diode 30 is, the lower the frequency of the inverter, which agrees with both of the simulation and experimental results as shown in
T1 may for example be a TL431™manufactured by Texas Instruments Incorporated. The output voltage of T1 is adjusted by reference to the emitter of transistor Q2 through feedback resistor R12. The reference voltage is proportional to the current at VG. The output voltage from the regulator then controls the base voltage of Q2. This introduces a current threshold to the switching of Q2.
Q1 works in linear mode and functions as a variable resistor controlled by its base voltage. The function of Q2 is to increase the output current range of TL431. The voltage at the emitter of Q2 is roughly inversely related to the resistance of Q1, namely the smaller the resistance of Q1 is, the larger the voltage at the emitter of Q2. As a result, the output voltage of the inverting voltage amplifier 14 is inversely related to its input voltage because the larger its input voltage is, the smaller the resistance of Q1.
While embodiments have been illustrated by the description, 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/NZ2015/050109 | 8/13/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62040063 | Aug 2014 | US | |
62153784 | Apr 2015 | US |