The present invention relates to a wireless energy transfer system.
With mobile electronic devices becoming more popular, ease and flexibility of charging the mobile device's battery is of increasing importance. Typically most prior art devices use a mains connected converter which is hard wire connected to the mobile device to provide a low voltage DC supply for charging.
An alternative to wired charging is wireless charging. Prior art examples of wireless energy transfer include induction, resonant coupling, electromagnetic radiation and laser. Induction may only be useful where the device is very close, such as wireless dock charging for electric toothbrushes, or a transformer. At mid distances resonant coupling is used, such as in some RFID and smart cards. Because the efficiency reduces dramatically with distance, for larger distances a high degree of directionality is required. Longer distance options include EM radiation and laser. However such methods maybe sensitive to the device orientation. Thus the user may have to keep the device stationary and perpendicular to the flux to maintain the power transfer.
For mobile electronic devices, it may be more convenient if the user did not have to dock the device for charging. For example it may be desirable if the device was able to charge when the user was simply in the same room as the charging station, (perhaps with the device in his or her pocket), similar to WiFi hotspots. In this scenario induction and laser are inappropriate, and EM radiation may be more desirable.
Thus for EM radiation it is necessary to focus the radiation on the device, and therefore to track the device's location. One technical challenge may be how to locate a receiver accurately at very low power consumption at the receiver. Prior art solutions such as RFID may prove difficult because:
(a). A generic RFID module at UHF band, if mounted in the transmitter and receiver, may not allow for beam scanning and the omni-directional radiation is very inefficient.
(b). Because of the ultra low power level, it may be difficult to resolve between the signal from the TX, acknowledgement from the RX, any reflections and other interference, to allow for accurate 3D location estimation.
Prior art attempts at wireless energy transfer include U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,856,291; 7,057,514; 7,383,064 and 7,639,994, and Japanese Patent Publication number 08-103039. However these do not provide suitable solutions to the problem mentioned.
In general terms, the invention relates to a wireless energy transfer system that is capable of:
1. Transmitting RF energy to a single or multiple specific directions rather than omni-directionally or a front-side,
2. Wirelessly charging mobile electronic devices which consume less than a dozen millwatts, yet avoiding unnecessary radiation to humans,
3. accurately detecting the 3D location of a mobile electronic device that needs energy transfer, and/or
4. Tracking the mobile electronic device whilst in motion.
The detecting and tracking may done by a transmitter (Tx) or base station, using beam scanning across the volume/area of coverage, which is divided into sectors. The beam scanning is done at 2.45 GHz. If a receiver (Rx) or mobile electronic device receives the beam scan it sends an acknowledgement at 860 MHz. The strongest acknowledgement indicates to the TX which sector the RX is in, after which energy transfer is focussed towards that sector.
In a first specific aspect there is provided a wireless energy transfer system comprising: a transmitter configured to beam scan RF radiation across a plurality of sectors at a first frequency, a receiver storing energy from the RF radiation, and sending acknowledgements at a second frequency, the first frequency being significantly different from the second frequency, and a controller configured to direct wireless energy transfer from the transmitter substantially at the receiver based on the acknowledgements.
One or more example embodiments of the invention will now be described, with reference to the following figures, in which:
The system 100 is shown in
The steerable antenna 106 is a phased array with M×N elements. It transmits RF energy at 2.45 GHz and has a range of a couple of meters. The coverage area is divided into sectors which may be 1D or 2D. For example if the sectors are 1D, then each sector is defined by a horizontal angle from a reference. In
The mobile electronic device 104 may be a mobile phone, digital camera, portable media player, radio, LED lighting devices or the like. Typically the device 102 will be low power consumption, for example less than 1W.
The device 104 is shown in more detail in
Both the receiving antenna 200 and transmitting antenna 204 are omni directional. For example
The IC 202 may be an ASIC (application specific integrated circuits) design (such as a low cost CMOS process) which is ultra low power consumption. It may include an RF-DC rectifier 206, a battery or super capacitor 208 and an acknowledgement circuit 210. The RF-DC rectifier 206 converts the RF energy and rectifies it into DC, which is stored in the battery or a super capacitor 208.
The acknowledgement circuit 210 is shown in more detail in
If the battery voltage is below the threshold 302, the comparator 300 enables a function generator 304. The enabled function generator 304 generates pulses at very low frequency (˜kHz or lower). Normally data pulses have a duty cycle of 50%. To save energy as much as possible, its duty cycle may be reduced to 1% or even lower. However, its pulse width may be reasonably wide, and may be limited by the available bandwidth in RFID. If the antennas in
Each receiver has a unique ID 306 and this data is multiplied 308 with the low frequency clock output from the function generator 304. An oscillator 310 will be powered on and tuned by the coded pulses from the multiplier 308. The oscillator 310 is a gated voltage controlled oscillator with a 867.5 MHz central frequency. By using ultra-low duty cycle pulse trains, the overall power consumption of the oscillator 310 may be minimized and will be only a fraction of the received power. The oscillator 310 output is transmitted by the transmitting antenna 204.
The receiving antenna 108 is shown in more detail in
Operation of the FPGA 110 is shown by the various waveforms in
The system 100 will operate in at least two modes:
1. Searching for receivers
The FGPA 110 scans and stores the sampled peak voltage of the feedback. It then compares all the sectors and the highest voltage peak is the estimate of the device 104 location.
2. Charging and tracking of receivers
In the course of charging, the device 104 keeps acknowledging at very low duty cycles. If the battery is fully charged, no acknowledgement will be sent. The device 104 stops charging. The FGPA 110 also stores the peak detected energy. If there is a big variation in peak detected energy, the steerable antenna 106 enters mode 1 and starts scanning again.
In most applications, the steerable antenna 106 will focus an RF beam at a single direction. However, it is also possible to configure the steerable antenna 106 to send focus beams. With 8 antennas in a row, the radiation pattern of transmitting at +30 degrees 700 is plotted in
The advantages of using two widely separated frequencies transmit and receive frequencies rather than one single frequency may include:
1. Less or no interference between RF transmit and receive frequency.
2. The ability to conduct beam scanning allowing higher efficiency of energy transfer.
3. Low power consumption at the device 104.
4. Smaller device 104 size.
5. Because the acknowledgement signal is such low power, this system allows relatively accurate detection.
6. Since no talk and listen period is required, the acquisition time is very fast and the system can dynamically track device movement with minimal delay.
While example embodiments of the invention have been described in detail, many variations are possible within the scope of the invention as claimed as will be clear to a skilled reader.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201108853-1 | Nov 2011 | SG | national |