Title :
Rapid Wireless Capacitor Charging Using a Multi-Tapped Inductively-Coupled Secondary Coil
Author :
Mercier, Patrick P. ; Chandrakasan, Anantha P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Abstract :
This paper presents an inductive coupling system designed to wirelessly charge ultra-capacitors used as energy storage elements. Although ultra-capacitors offer the native ability to rapidly charge, it is shown that standard inductive coupling circuits only deliver maximal power for a specific load impedance which depends on coil geometries and separation distances. Since a charging ultra-capacitor can be modeled as an increasing instantaneous impedance, maximum power is thus delivered to the ultra-capacitor at only a single point in the charging interval, resulting in a longer than optimal charging time. Analysis of inductive coupling theory reveals that the optimal load impedance can be modified by adjusting the secondary coil inductance and resonant tuning capacitance. A three-tap secondary coil is proposed to dynamically modify the optimal load impedance throughout the capacitor charging interval. Measurement results show that the proposed architecture can expand its operational range by up to 2.5 × and charge a 2.5 F ultra-capacitor to 5 V upwards of 3.7 × faster than a conventional architecture.
Keywords :
inductive power transmission; supercapacitors; capacitance 2.5 F; coil geometry; energy storage element; inductive coupling system; inductive coupling theory; maximal power delivery; multi tapped inductively coupled secondary coil; optimal load impedance; rapid wireless capacitor charging; three tap secondary coil; ultracapacitor charging; voltage 5 V; Capacitors; Coils; Couplings; Equations; Impedance; Inductance; Wireless communication; Capacitor charging; inductive coupling; multi-tap inductor; ultra-capacitor; wireless power transfer;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCSI.2013.2246231