| Literature DB >> 26640745 |
Sai Chun Tang1, Nathan J McDannold1.
Abstract
This paper investigated the power losses of unsegmented and segmented energy coupling coils for wireless energy transfer. Four 30-cm energy coupling coils with different winding separations, conductor cross-sectional areas, and number of turns were developed. The four coils were tested in both unsegmented and segmented configurations. The winding conduction and intrawinding dielectric losses of the coils were evaluated individually based on a well-established lumped circuit model. We found that the intrawinding dielectric loss can be as much as seven times higher than the winding conduction loss at 6.78 MHz when the unsegmented coil is tightly wound. The dielectric loss of an unsegmented coil can be reduced by increasing the winding separation or reducing the number of turns, but the power transfer capability is reduced because of the reduced magnetomotive force. Coil segmentation using resonant capacitors has recently been proposed to significantly reduce the operating voltage of a coil to a safe level in wireless energy transfer for medical implants. Here, we found that it can naturally eliminate the dielectric loss. The coil segmentation method and the power loss analysis used in this paper could be applied to the transmitting, receiving, and resonant coils in two- and four-coil energy transfer systems.Entities:
Keywords: Coil segmentation; dielectric power loss; displacement current; implantable medical devices; low-voltage operation; wireless intermediate-range scheme for energy and signal transmission (WISEST)
Year: 2014 PMID: 26640745 PMCID: PMC4666560 DOI: 10.1109/JESTPE.2014.2330951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE J Emerg Sel Top Power Electron ISSN: 2168-6777 Impact factor: 4.472