The invention is related to the field of resonant wireless power (RWP), and in particular to an open-circuit impedance control of a RWP receiver for voltage limiting.
A resonant wireless power receiver includes a matching network designed to resonate at the frequency of power transfer. This feeds into a semiconductor rectifier, then a dc/dc converter in order to convert the AC power to regulated DC. If the magnitude of the AC voltage exceeds the operating voltage of the rectifier, or if the rectified voltage exceeds the operating voltage of the dc/dc converter, these circuits can be damaged.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a resonant wireless power (RWP) receiver. The RWP receiver includes an inductor element that couples with a resonant wireless power source. A capacitor arrangement is coupled to the inductor element altering the open-circuit impedance of the RWP receiver to reduce the ac voltage under certain defined situations. The capacitor arrangement includes a plurality capacitors tuned to a control ac voltage in the RWP receiver.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a resonant wireless power (RWP) system. The RWP system includes a source circuit having a reflected impedance in series with a source coil. A receiver circuit is coupled to the source circuit using an inductor element, and includes a capacitor arrangement coupled to the inductor element altering the open-circuit impedance of the receiver circuit to reduce the ac voltage under certain defined situations. The capacitor arrangement includes a plurality capacitors tuned to a control ac voltage in the receiver circuit.
The invention provides novel techniques for adaptively altering the open-circuit impedance of the resonant receiver to reduce the ac voltage under certain defined situations.
In this case, the coupling k is modeled as a current-controlled voltage source Voc in series with the receiver coil L2. The impedance seen by this voltage source Voc, which includes the coil L2, matching network 6 and load (e.g., rectifier, dc/dc, load current) R1, is Zoc. On the source side, when coupling is present, one can model the effect of the coupling as an impedance in series with the source coil L1 called Zref, the reflected impedance. Both the open-circuit impedance and the reflected impedance are complex quantities—they have real (resistive) and imaginary (reactive) components. For a 1:1 RWP system, the reflected impedance is related to the open-circuit impedance by this formula:
In the series-parallel resonant circuit of
If the switch is closed, Zoc is given by
A capacitor that can be switched in to adjust the open-circuit impedance Zoc, such as Cd in this example, is defined as a Zoc-adjustment capacitor.
The two open-circuit impedances can be represented as the “X” and “O” symbols on the complex impedance plane 10, as shown in
1. Tune the receiver for normal operation with the switch open, and close the switch in an excess power condition to reduce the ac voltage at the rectifier input.
2. Tune the receiver for normal operation with the switch closed, and open the switch in an excess power condition to reduce the ac voltage at the rectifier input.
If the capacitance values of C2a and C2b are comparable, the circuit of
The techniques described herein adaptively alters the open-circuit impedance of any resonant receiver to reduce the ac voltage. The invention allows one to change the open-circuit impedance that also changes the reflected impedance seen by a source by tuning the system to produce a higher ac voltage at a rectifier input. Moreover, the invention demonstrate several designs of a RWP receiver by tuning the receiver for normal operation with the switch open, and close the switch in an excess power condition to reduce the ac voltage at the rectifier input. Also, a receiver can be tuned for normal operation with the switch closed, and open the switch in an excess power condition to reduce the ac voltage at the rectifier input.
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to several preferred embodiments thereof, various changes, omissions and additions to the form and detail thereof, may be made therein, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 61/706,932 filed Sep. 28, 2012, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US13/62066 | 9/27/2013 | WO | 00 | 4/30/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61706932 | Sep 2012 | US |