Wireless Power Transmission Final Report
Wireless Power Transmission Final Report
on
Submitted By
DIWAKAR BANSAL 0619231015
SANTOSH KR. VAISH 0619231041
ANKIT SINGH 0619231007
Under the Guidance of
MRS. VINNI CHOUDHARY
CERTIFICATE
Certified that DIWAKAR BANSAL, SANTOSH KR. VAISH AND
ANKIT SINGH have carried out the seminar work presented in this report
entitled WIRELESS POWER TRANSMISSION for the award of
Bachelor of Technology in Electronics and Communication Engineering
during the academic session 2009-10 from Uttar Pradesh Technical
University, Lucknow. The project embodies result of the work and studies
carried out by Student himself and the contents of the report do not form the
basis for the award of any other degree to the candidate or to anybody else.
Piyush Yadav
(Project Coordinator)
EC Deptt.
EC Deptt.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This seminar has been compiled & completed under the expert guidance of
ECE department personnel. I hereby heartily acknowledge their unstinted
help & valuable assistance.
DIWAKAR BANSAL
SANTOSH KR. VAISH
ANKIT SINGH
4th Year (E.C)
Deptt. of Electronics and Communication Engg.
GLBITM, Greater Noida
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ABSTRACT
1.
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Objectives...........................................................................................................................
1.2 Specifications......................................................................................................................
1.3 Block Diagram....................................................................................................................
1.4 Subprojects.........................................................................................................................
1.4.1 DC Source................................................................................................................
1.4.2 Full-Bridge Inverter.................................................................................................
1.4.3 Gate Drivers.............................................................................................................
1.4.4 PIC...........................................................................................................................
1.4.5 DAC/VCO................................................................................................................
1.4.6 Current Sensing........................................................................................................
1.4.7 Coils and Air Gap.....................................................................................................
1.4.8 Transformer..............................................................................................................
1.4.9 Rectifier/Filter..........................................................................................................
1.4.10 Buck Converter......................................................................................................
2.
DESIGN PROCEDURE...........................................................................................................
2.1 DC Source...........................................................................................................................
2.2 Full-Bridge Inverter/Gate Drivers......................................................................................
2.3 PIC, DAC, and VCO..........................................................................................................
2.4 Current Sensing..................................................................................................................
2.5 Coils and Air Gap...............................................................................................................
2.6 Transformer.........................................................................................................................
2.7 Rectifier and Filter..............................................................................................................
2.8 Buck Converter...................................................................................................................
3.
DESIGN DETAILS................................................................................................................
3.1 DC Source.........................................................................................................................
3.2 Full-Bridge Inverter/Gate Drivers....................................................................................
3.3 PIC, DAC, and VCO........................................................................................................
3.4 Current Sensing................................................................................................................
3.5 Coils and Air Gap.............................................................................................................
3.6 Transformer.......................................................................................................................
3.7 Rectifier and Filter............................................................................................................
3.8 Buck Converter.................................................................................................................
4.
COMPONENT USED............................................................................................................
4.1 Parts..................................................................................................................................
5.
CONCLUSIONS....................................................................................................................
5.1 Accomplishments..............................................................................................................
5.2 Uncertainties.....................................................................................................................
REFERENCES..............................................................................................................................
1. INTRODUCTION
In the age of wireless communication and portable music players the
demand for powering those devices wirelessly is ever prevalent. The
advantages of portability and wireless communication are greatly hindered
by the fact that the devices themselves must be plugged into the walls to
charge. The next generation in portable devices is a device that receives
power wirelessly. The first step in wireless power is providing power to a
computer charging pad wirelessly. The market for this device would be
businesses with large conference rooms. The device would allow users to
plug their phones and computers into the conference room table without
large power bricks and cords running everywhere. The pads can
conveniently be placed under the table and inside the ceiling so there are no
visible wires that could ruin the aesthetic feel of the room. The ease of
installation and convenience of this device would make the marketability of
this product quite large and if finished could be seen in thousands of
conference rooms. If the efficiency of coupling could be increased slightly
further, wireless power transmission could become a standard means for
charging a mobile device.
1.1 Objectives
The overall goal of this project is to design and successfully implement a
wireless power transmission system to be used in a conference room. The
system will work by using resonant coils to transmit power from an AC line
in the ceiling to a pad on the table. The pad will output DC voltages in
order to charge computers and cell phones. There are several benefits for the
use of such a system:
Elimination of cords on the ground that make tripping hazards.
Allows no wire installation and mobility on table.
A necessary step towards consumer wireless power.
The entire interface has the following features:
Feedback control for driving frequency to maximize efficiency.
DC power output for computers and cell phone charging that allows
for elimination of large power bricks.
Slight mobility offered for different table heights and positions.
1.2 Specifications
The specifications original specifications from our design proposal are as
follows in Error: Reference source not found.
TABLE 1: DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS
Transmission Efficiency
>30 %
Overall Efficiency
>25 %
Output Voltage
18 VDC 1.8 V
5 VDC .5 V
Frequency
Within 10 kHz of optimal
Power Abilities
Laptop and cell phone
1.3 Block Diagram
The block diagram for the transmission setup is shown in Error:
Reference source not found.
2. DESIGN PROCEDURES
The overall concept for mutually inductive coils is an idea from an MIT
experiment used to transmit power to power a light bulb. The size of the
inductors was increased and the number of turns increased due to ideal
equations in hopes of lowering resonant frequency and increasing
transmission efficiency. PSPICE simulation was done wherever possible to
verify design before actual testing.
2.1 DC source
The DC source was designed with a rectifier and filter circuit. A full bridge
rectifier was chosen because they have less ripple than a half bridge rectifier
because the frequency is twice as fast. This means the filter has to supply
the voltage for only half as long so it has less time to decay. Figure 2 shows
the difference in the two rectifiers.
l
o r A
Using the dimensions given and the relative permeability of air the
reluctance is 2.026 x106
A
. The reluctance can be used to find the mutual
Nm
4 N1 N 2 4 N1 N 2 o r A
1
l
2 MC 2 4 N1 N 2 o r AC
o A
l
f
l
2 A 4 N1 N 2 o r o
imax N
l
The core losses were attempted to be minimized using. The number of turns
was kept to a minimum to prevent losses from series resistance in the
windings.
The rectifier was chosen using a single diode to prevent loss because there is
only current flowing through one diode and the frequency is fast enough
that the full-wave is not need. The diode chosen had its frequency verified
by looking at [12]. The capacitor was picked such that its resonant
frequency is above 6 MHz because it will not act like a capacitor above this
frequency. The inductance from the connections dominates the impedance,
and a smaller capacitor was chosen than in the top filter because the self
resonant frequency is higher. Ceramic capacitors tend to have a lower
capacitance than electrolytic capacitors, but in this case the frequency is
high enough that a lower capacitance is acceptable.
2.8 Buck Converter
The component was selected because it can handle the power necessary for
the cell phone, outputs 5 V, and meets the power requirements for the cell
phone.
A series inductor and a capacitor to ground will filter the signal output by
the buck converter making it a cleaner signal.
10
3. DESIGN DETAILS
3.1 DC Source
The DC source comprises of a rectifier circuit using 1N1188 diodes and a PI
filter.
11
12
13
3.5 Coils
An inductor made with about 100 turns and a diameter of around 1 m. It
will also have a current limiting resistor in series to make sure nothing burns
up. An inductor like the top coil that will receive the electromagnetic waves
transmitted by the top coil and have a current and voltage induced to power
the devices. The inductance of either coil was around 27 mH. This was
lower than calculated but still relatively high. Preliminary tests were done
on the coils to find their resonant frequency. Multiple frequencies were
found, including 3.4 MHz, 6 MHz, and one around 9 MHz. The most
resonant of these being the 6 MHz signal, but the 3.4 MHz was chosen for
the target frequency, due to the fact that it is easier to find parts for and will
work nearly as well.
14
These frequencies were far from the expected frequency. This could be due
to a multitude of factors including skin effect of the 20 AWG wire,
imperfections in the windings, incorrect permeability numbers, incorrect
estimates of capacitance, and fringing among others. The high frequency
made the designs a bit more restricted.
3.6 Transformer
The transformer was not made because we were never able to get a voltage
on the bottom coil so it was hard to figure out a turn ratio and what the
saturation current would be.
3.7 Half Wave Rectifier
A diode that will take the signal induced in the bottom coil and cut off the
negative side of the AC, helping to create a DC signal.
Filter: A series 1mH inductor and a capacitor to ground that will filter the
signal output by the rectifier making it a smoother signal.
15
4. COMPONENT USED
The final product is designed to operate off a wall outlet. The only other
considerations for cost are placing the bottom coil under the table top. The
final design would also need some voltage supplies (5 and 12).
4.1 Parts
TABLE 2: ESTIMATED COMPONENT USED
Part
Block
Quantity
Current Sensing Resistor
Current Sensor
1
62 V Zener Diode
Current Sensor
1
Operational Amplifier
Current Sensor
1
2.7k, 100,
Current Sensor
1
and 2M Resistors 1/4W
Current Senor MOSFETS
Current Sensor
2
Diodes
DC Supply
4
1mH Inductor
DC Supply
2
Capacitor 1000uF
DC supply
2
40PIN PIC
PIC
1
20 MHz Oscillator
PIC
1
Voltage Controlled Oscillator
DAC/VCO
1
DAC
DAC/VCO
1
Gate Driver
Gate drivers
2
Full-Bridge Inverter MOSFETs
Full-Bridge Inverter 4
700m Magnet Wire (20AWG)
Top and bottom coils 1
Scaffolding Wood
Top and bottom coils 1
Transformer
Transformer
1
Diode
Bottom Filter
1
Capacitor 1uF
Bottom Filter
1
Resistor 2.7K
Buck Converter
1
Buck Converter
Buck Converter
1
Capacitors 100uF, .01uF, and
Buck Converter
1
470Uf
100uH Inductor
Buck Converter
1
16
Diode
Buck Converter
5. CONCLUSION
5.1 Accomplishments
Proved that power can be transmitted via resonantly coupled coils
(theoretically)
Multiple resonant frequencies found at many coil spacing
PIC able to regulate frequency based on current measured
60 Hz DC wall voltage filtered with a small voltage ripple
3 MHz signal able to be filtered with a small voltage ripple
5.2 Uncertainties
MOSFETs were not able to operate fast enough to drive the coils at
resonance.
Isolation problems for the inverter.
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REFERENCES
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_energy_transfer.
2. http://www.electricalternative.com/wireless.htm.
3. SIXTH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM NIKOLA TESLA
October 18 20, 2006, Belgrade, SASA, Serbia
4. http://novaspivack.typepad.com/nova_spivacks_weblog/2003/0
8/i_want_wireless.html.
5. http://ecoupled.com/applicationsMain.html
6. http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2009/01/video-wireless/
7. http://www.instructables.com/id/Wireless-Power-TransmissionOver-Short-Distances-U/
8. http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/techtalk51-30.pdf
9. http://www.electronicsinfoline.com/New/Lights_and_Optics/wire
less-power-transmission-over-short-distances-using-inductivepower-transfer.html