The instant application claims priority to Provisional Application No. 62/096,264, filed Dec. 23, 2014, the specification of which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
The disclosure relates to a method, apparatus and system to wireless charging station. Specifically, the disclosed embodiments provide improved charging stations for lower electric field emission.
Wireless charging or inductive charging uses a magnetic field to transfer energy between two devices. Wireless charging can be implemented at a charging station. Energy is sent from one device to another device through on inductive coupling. The inductive coupling is used to charge batteries or run the receiving device.
Wireless induction chargers use an induction coil to generate a magnetic field from within a charging base station. A second induction coil in the portable device receives power from the magnetic field and converts the power back into electrical current to charge the battery of the portable device. The two induction coils in proximity form an electrical transformer. Greater distances between sender and receiver coils may be achieved when the inductive charging system uses resonant inductive coupling. Resonant inductive coupling is the near field wireless transmission of electrical energy between two coils that are tuned to resonate at the same frequency.
While a wireless charging coil generates the magnetic field for power transfer, it also generate electric field as a byproduct, which leads to increased electromagnetic radiation, electric shock and electromagnetic, interference (EMI) with sensors of the device being charged (e.g., touch pad, touch screen etc.) There is a need for improved wireless charging coils to reduce the generated electric field, electromagnetic and radio interference while enhancing safety.
These and other embodiments of the disclosure will be discussed with reference to the following exemplary and non-limiting illustrations, in which like elements are numbered similarly, and where:
Conventional A4WP-based wireless charging systems operate at about 6.78 MHz. The power transmitting unit (PTU) roil of such charging systems usually require multi-turn spirals to provide the magnetic field uniformity and the coupling needed to power receiving unit (PRU). A significant challenge in PTU coil design, particularly for large active areas, is that the coil will present much higher losses due to the higher self-capacitance accumulated at the coil.
When the coil LC combinations has a resonant frequency much lower than the operating frequency ω, the equivalent resistance and inductance looking into the parallel LC circuit can be simplified as follows:
As shown in Equations (3) and (4), a small shunt capacitance acts as a multiplier for both the coil inductance and resistance. Adding a small parallel capacitor allows a secondary path for current to follow in a direction opposite to the current in inductor L. Thus, when the combined circuit is driven by a constant current source (such as in most A4WP wireless charging systems), the current (I+ΔI) through the L and R is higher than input current (I) which accounts for the increase in equivalent resistance and inductance. This relationship is represented in
In addition, to the intended magnetic field (H-Field) which may be used for power transfer, the self-capacitance build up introduces a strong Electric field (E-Field) in areas near the PTU coil (the near field). The mixing (and unwanted) E-Field on PTU coil couples to PRU device and causes interference to sensors (such as touch sensors, touch screens etc.). The strong E-field may also cause electric shock when the user touches PRU devices. The unwanted E-field on PTU coil also generates significant radiation that hinders the electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) regulatory approval of PTU system. The augmented E-Field makes or tuning the PTU coil highly susceptible to proximity of foreign objects thereby making the PTU system unstable. Typical foreign objects include dielectric material such as a table surface or the human body. Conventional wireless charging, coil designs are limited by the self-capacitance buildup. The self-capacitance buildup limits position flexibility and power transfer distance.
The disclosed embodiments provide method and system for diminishing the self-capacitance phenomenon common to conventional PTU coils. In an exemplary embodiment, one or more capacitive tuning component is placed strategically along a multi-turn charging coil design to reduce the impact of self-capacitance among multitude of turns of the coil.
In one embodiment, the capacitive tuning component resonates each coil turn individually to avoid AC from accumulating among adjacent turns of the coil. The capacitive tuning component minimizes E-Field generation while keeping intact the near field H-Field. The disclosed embodiments also reduce the EMI and RF interference (RFI) emissions, minimize the risk of electric shock to a user and mitigates interference to PRU touch sensors.
In another embodiment, the disclosure provides a prices for low emission, robust, coil design to optimize the coil. The optimization enables current distribution flatness throughout the coil to thereby minimize the E-Field generation.
In still another embodiment, a capacitor is added at the center of the length of the spiral coil to provide the maximum effect of reducing the E-Field as compared with adding one or more capacitors to each turn of the coil. Thus, only one location at the spiral coil is broken by adding a single capacitor.
The equivalent circuit model for the coil of
The equivalent circuit model of
The parasitic capacitance (Cn(n+1)) between adjacent turns magnify the inductances and resistances of each turn. Consequently, the combined resistance and inductance is much higher than simple sum of inductance and resistance of each turn. For example, assume L1=L2=L3=L4=L5=3 uH, C12=C23=C34=C45=10 pF, R1=R2=R3=R4=R5=0.1 Ohm, at A4WP operating frequency of 6.78 MHz.
When the circuit of
In one embodiment of the disclosure, the high loss and large electric field is substantially diminished by positioning capacitive tuning components at strategically designated locations along the multi-turn coil. The capacitive tuning components (interchangeably, elements) reduce the impact of self-capacitance among the many hums of the coil. In one embodiment of the disclosure, each coil turn resonates individually to thereby prevent voltage buildup among adjacent coil turns. This, in turn, minimizes the electric field generation while keeping the near field H-field intact. The disclosed embodiment also reduces the RFI emission.
In one embodiment, the added series capacitance cancels out (or tunes out) the equivalent inductance on each turn such that between substantially the same locations along each turn (such as V1, V2 . . . V5 points as shown in
As seen in
In the above examples, the each-turn-equivalent inductance, resistance and mutual capacitances/inductances are assumed to be equal for simplicity. In practice, and with coils of arbitrary shapes, these values can be calculated through EM simulations.
Comparative prototypes were prepared to show efficacy of the disclosed embodiments over the conventional design.
Near Field Measurements—The coils shown in
As shown in
To show the improved coil robustness, a series of experiments were carried out where human proximity to the coil was emulated by placing a hand over the coil at different proximities. The measured real resistance and reactance shifts were recorded as shown in
In contrast, the proposed coil structure (
EMI Evaluation Results—Extensive EMI tests were carried out with the same switch mode power amplifier connected to the two coil prototypes shown in
Specifically,
In certain embodiments, the disclosure provides a method and apparatus for determining optimal design location of capacitive components of a wireless charging coil. For an exemplary coil that lies in the x-y plane as shown in
A coil with low or no accumulated parasitic capacitance has low current variation. This, in turn, limits the E-Field amplitude and makes the coil more robust. In one embodiment of the disclosure, the term robust is used to denote capacity to remain substantially unaffected by surrounding conditions. The surrounding conditions may include, for example, the impacted of a physical object (e.g., a human hand). Tuning one or more of the coil turns eliminates the reactance (inductance) build up inside the coil. The tuning significantly reduces the electric field over the coil's length as well as the unwanted emission.
The three-dimensional Ez field is shown in
The measurements of
As an example of the optimization process, a coil that was optimized for z-component of the H-Field uniformity (assuming uniform equal current on the coil loops) was selected for this example. The capacitor locations were selected along one radial cut of the coil (as shown in
In an exemplary implementation, the optimization process was based on the E-Fields components (Ez and Eρ) with the goal of minimizing the average value of the combination of these components. Method of moment code was used to predict current in the coil wire and compute the three components (Ez, Eρ, and Eφ) of the near electric field. MoM was used to solve electromagnetic problems where the unknown current on the wire was represented by known N functions (basis functions) with unknown coefficients/amplitudes. The problem was then tested against the boundary conditions to define a linear system of N equations. The equations were solved numerically to find the basis functions coefficients. The system may be described by Equation (5):
L(f)=g (5)
In Equation (5), L is the linear system an integral operator in this example), f is the unknown current function and g is the excitation source.
Thin wire approximation was used for optimization, where the current is a filament at the center of wire Ī({grave over (r)}), {grave over (r)} is the position vector along the wire carrying the current and the current is a vector in direction tangential to the wire. The linear operator is an integral equation:
The right hand side of Equation (6) is the linear operator and left is the excitation source. G is a Green's function
and ∇ is Del, the partial derivative operator. The current is approximated using N weighted basis functions fn, they are tangential to the wire everywhere. The linear operator applied on the current is equivalent to applying on the basis function summation.
Ī({grave over (r)})≈ΣNanfn({grave over (r)}) (7)
ΣNanL(fn({grave over (r)}))≈g (8)
The integral equation was tested by N testing function fm(r), the testing function were the same as the basis function. The integral equation was tested at the boundary conditions (i.e., the wire surface where the tangential field equal zero except at the source segment):
ΣNan<fm, L(fn)>=<fm, g>Zmn=<fm, L(fn)>, bm=<fm, g>>fm, fn>=∫fmfm∫fnfnd{grave over (r)}dr (9)
This operation forms N×N linear equation system Zmnan=bm that is solved to find an and hence the current. The magnetic and electric fields are found by means of magnetic vector potential A
The optimization process starts with initial values for the capacitors (i.e., initial population). MoM was used to calculate the electric field components at the observation points of z0=6 mm, x0=0 for one cut to expedite the optimization time. The cost function that the optimization algorithm tries to minimize is the mean value of the Eρ, and Ez values. A genetic algorithms employed to control the optimization: it changes the values of the capacitors and stores the correspondent cost function. In one embodiment, the optimization stops when the cost function value is not improving.
In an exemplary embodiment, the coil was included with six capacitors, one capacitor for each loop. The capacitor values, C={c1, c2, . . . , c6}, are the optimization variables. The optimization problem may be defined as
argc min(mean(Eφ, Ez) at (xo, yo, zo)) (13)
x
o=0, −12 cm<yo<12 cm, zo=6 mm (14)
In the above equations, xo, yo, and zo are the observation points, where the electric field is minimized.
At step 1520, the algorithm computes the cost function of the selected population by solving the coil structure by MoM and summing the magnitude of E-Field along observation point.
The algorithm keeps changing the optimization variables (i.e. capacitors values) while keeping track of the cost function at step 1530. The process is continued until the optimization reaches an end by finding the values of the capacitors that produces the minimum cost function. These steps are show in steps 1530 and 1550. The end, at step 1540, is reached when the reduction in the cost function is no longer significant.
The following are provided to illustrate exemplary and non-limiting embodiments of the disclosure. Example 1 is directed to a transmitter charging station, comprising: a length of conductive wire to form a multi-turn spiral coil having one or more turns around one or more axis: a plurality of discrete capacitors for each of the respective plurality of turns; and wherein at least two of the plurality of capacitors are configured to have substantially the same resonance frequency.
Example 2 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein a first of the plurality of capacitors along a first portion of the multi-turn spiral coil is configured to have substantially the same resonance frequency as a second of die plurality of capacitors along with a second portion of the multi-turn spiral coil. The first or the second portion of the coil may define a turn of the coil of the multi-turn spiral coil or it may define a first and a second portions of the length of the conductive wire.
Example 3 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein at least two of the plurality of the capacitors are linearly aligned along a plane of the cross section of the spiral coil.
Example 4 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein at least one of the plurality of capacitors has a different capacitance value than the remaining capacitors.
Example 5 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein each of the plurality of capacitors have substantially the same capacitance value.
Example 6 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein the capacitance values for the plurality of capacitors are selected to minimize near field electric field above a surface of the spiral coil.
Example 7 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein the plurality of capacitors are connected in series.
Example 8 is directed to the transmitter charging station of example 1, wherein at least two of the plurality of capacitors along with their respective portions of the multi-turn spiral coil are configured to have substantially the same resonance frequency.
Example 9 is directed to a method for reducing near field electric field emission of a charging station, the method comprising: providing a length of conductive wire to form a multi-turn spiral coil having m turns around one or more axis positioning n discrete capacitors for each of the respective plurality of turns; and selecting capacitance value for each of n discrete capacitors as a function of the number of the turns in the multi-turn spiral coil and a cost function associated with the plurality of capacitors.
Example 10 is directed to the method of example 9, wherein m and n are integers and wherein m is one of equal, greater or less than n.
Example 11. The method of example 9, further comprising determining a cost function for at least one of the plurality of capacitors at an observation point above the charging station.
Example 12 is directed to the method of example 9, further comprising selecting a first of the discrete capacitors along a first portion of the conductive wire is configured to have substantially the same resonance frequency as a second of the discrete capacitors and a second portion of the conductive wire.
Example 13 is directed to the method of example 9, wherein at least one of the plurality of capacitors has a different capacitance value than others.
Example 14 is directed to the method of example 9, wherein the plurality of capacitors have substantially the same capacitance value.
Example 15 is directed to the method of example 8, further comprising aligning at least two of the plurality of the capacitors along a plane of the cross section of the spiral coil.
Example 16 is directed to the method of example 9, wherein the total capacitive value for the plurality of capacitors is selected to minimize near field electric field above a surface of the spiral coil.
Example 17 is directed to a wireless charging station, comprising a length of conductive wire to form a multi-turn spiral coil having a plurality of turns around one or more axis; and a plurality of tuning elements positioned along the length of the conductive wire to correspond to each of the plurality of coil turns to resonate the multi-turn spiral coil.
Example 18 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, further comprising a first electrode and a second electrode to communicate current to the length of conductive wire.
Example 19 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, wherein at least one of the tuning elements comprises a capacitive element.
Example 20 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, wherein each tuning element defines a capacitive element and wherein each tuning element resonates each coil turn individually.
Example 21 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, wherein a first of the plurality of tuning elements and a first portion of the multi-turn spiral coil is configured to have substantially the same resonance frequency as a second of the plurality of tuning elements and the second portion of the multi-turn spiral coil.
Example 22 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, wherein at least two of the plurality of tuning elements are connected in series and are linearly aligned along a plane of the cross section of the spiral coil.
Example 23 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, wherein at least one of the tuning elements has a different capacitance value than another tuning element.
Example 24 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 17, wherein each of the plurality of tuning elements have substantially the same capacitance value.
Example 25 is directed to the wireless charging station of example 24, wherein capacitance values for the plurality of tuning elements is selected to minimize a near field electric field above a surface of the wireless charging station.
While the principles of the disclosure have been illustrated in relation to the exemplary embodiments shown herein, the principles of the disclosure are not limited thereto and include any modification, variation or permutation thereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62096264 | Dec 2014 | US |