DocumentCode
109996
Title
A Nonresonant Self-Synchronizing Inductively Coupled 0.18-
m CMOS Power Receiver and Charger
Author
Lazaro, Orlando ; Rincon-Mora, Gabriel A.
Author_Institution
Analog, Power, Energy IC Res., Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA, USA
Volume
3
Issue
1
fYear
2015
fDate
Mar-15
Firstpage
261
Lastpage
271
Abstract
While the functionality of emerging wireless microsensors, cellular phones, and biomedical implants, to name a few, is on the rise, their dimensions continue to shrink. This is unfortunate because smaller batteries exhaust quicker. Not surprisingly, recharging batteries wirelessly is becoming increasingly popular today. Still, small pickup coils cannot harness much, so induced EMF voltages vEMF.S are low. Modern receivers can resonate these low input voltages to rectifiable levels, but only with a finely tuned capacitor that resonates at megahertz when on-chip and at kilohertz when off-chip. In other words, resonant rectifiers are sensitive to frequency and dissipate considerable switching power when integrated on-chip. Unluckily, excluding the resonant capacitor requires a control signal that synchronizes switching events to the transmitter´s operating frequency. The 0.18-μm CMOS prototype presented here derives this synchronizing signal from the coupled vEMF.S by counting the number of pulses of a higher-frequency clock across a half cycle during a calibration phase and using that number to forecast half-cycle crossings. This way, the prototyped IC switches every half cycle to draw up to 557 μW from 46.6 to 585-mVPK signals with 38%-84% efficiency across 1.0-5.0 cm.
Keywords
CMOS integrated circuits; coils; electric potential; inductive power transmission; secondary cells; IC switches; biomedical implants; cellular phones; charger; induced EMF voltages; nonresonant self-synchronizing inductively coupled CMOS power receiver; pickup coils; power 557 muW; resonant capacitor; resonant rectifiers; size 0.18 mum; wireless microsensors; Batteries; Calibration; Capacitors; Coils; Receivers; Resonant frequency; Switches; Contactless charging; inductive power transmission; inductively coupled power; low-threshold rectifier; switched-inductor receiver; wireless power transfer;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Emerging and Selected Topics in Power Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-6777
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JESTPE.2014.2322597
Filename
6812136
Link To Document