BI-DIRECTIONAL COMMUNICATION THROUGH CAPACITIVE COUPLING IN WIRELESS DEVICES
20230239007 · 2023-07-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02J50/80
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B5/00
ELECTRICITY
G06K7/14
PHYSICS
H02J50/80
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A system and method for bi-directional communication through capacitive coupling is achieved with capacitive plates within the environment of a wireless power transfer system. Data is transferred using capacitance over a separate path from the transfer of electrical power in the wireless power transfer system.
Claims
1. A system of bi-directional communication through capacitive coupling in an inductive wireless charging device, comprising: a wireless power transfer (WPT) system including a first transceiver with a transmitting capability and a second transceiver with a receiving capability for electrical power and data communication; the WPT system including a first capacitive plate and a second capacitive plate positioned between the first transceiver and the second transceiver, wherein a distance exists between a first capacitive plate and a second capacitive plate of the pair of capacitive plates; and the first transceiver configured to transmit an electrical signal to the first capacitive plate causing the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate to have a capacitive coupling, and wherein the electrical signal is received at the second transceiver from the second capacitive plate, wherein a data transfer from the first transceiver through the first capacitive plate and from the second capacitive to the second transceiver occurs over a separate path from a transfer of the electrical power from the first transceiver to the second transceiver.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the first transceiver and the first capacitive plate are located in the inductive wireless charging device that holds a barcode reader, and the second transceiver and the second capacitive plate are located in the barcode reader.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the inductive wireless charging device is a cradle.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein each of the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate have an active plate side and a ground plate side, and wherein the active plate side of the first capacitive plate and the active plate side of the second capacitive plate are faced toward each other to form a differential capacitive coupling.
5. The system of claim 4, wherein the each of the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate include one or more metal plates disposed on a support formed from a composite material.
6. The system of claim 4, wherein the metal plates include two active plates on the active plate side, and a single ground plate on the ground plate side for each of the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the two active plates are driven in differential mode to create an alternate electric field for each pair of facing plates.
8. The system of claim 4, wherein the first transceiver includes both the transmitting capability and the receiving capability for data communication through the first and second capacitive plates, and the second transceiver includes both the receiving capability and the transmitting capability for data communication through the first and second capacitive plates.
9. The system of claim 8, wherein a bi-directional communication occurs with data transferring from the first transceiver through the first capacitive plate to the second capacitive plate and from the second capacitive plate to the second transceiver in one direction and the data transferring from the second transceiver through the second capacitive plate to the first capacitive plate and from the first capacitive plate to the first transceiver in another direction.
10. A barcode reader has both wireless charging capability and short-range data communication capability, the barcode reader comprising: a wireless power charging receiver coil configured to inductively couple with a corresponding wireless power charging transmitter coil in a charging device to perform wireless power transfer therebetween; and a capacitive plate configured to capacitively couple with a corresponding capacitive plate in the charging device to perform short-range data communication therebetween that is independent of the wireless power transfer.
11. The barcode reader of claim 10, wherein the capacitive plate of the barcode reader and the corresponding capacitive plate of the charging device are configured for capacitive half-duplex communication.
12. The barcode reader of claim 10, further comprising a second capacitive plate configured to capacitively couple with a corresponding second capacitive plate in the charging device to perform short-range data communication therebetween to achieve full-duplex communication.
13. The barcode reader of claim 10, wherein the capacitive plate of the barcode reader and the corresponding capacitive plate of the charging device each have a bipolar configuration.
14. A method for bi-directional communication through capacitive coupling in a wireless charging device, comprising: operating a wireless power transfer (WPT) system that includes a first transceiver with a transmitting capability and a second transceiver with a receiving capability for electrical power and data communication; positioning a pair of capacitive plates between the first transceiver and the second transceiver, wherein a distance exits between a first capacitive plate and a second capacitive plate of the pair of capacitive plates; transmitting an electrical signal from the first transceiver to the first capacitive plate, wherein transmitting the electrical signal comprises creating a capacitance between the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate; and receiving the electrical signal at the second transceiver from the second capacitive plate, wherein the electrical signal transmitted to the first capacitive plate transfers from the first capacitive plate to the second capacitive plate from the capacitance between the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate, wherein transferring the electrical signal from the first transceiver through the first capacitive plate and from the second capacitive plate to the second transceiver occurs over a separate path from transferring the electrical power from the first transceiver to the second transceiver.
15. The method of claim 14, further comprising positioning the first transceiver and the first capacitive plate in the wireless charging device that holds a barcode reader, and positioning the second transceiver and the second capacitive plate in the barcode reader.
16. The method of claim 14, further comprising transferring data from the first transceiver to the second transceiver through the electrical signal that passes from the first transceiver through the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate to the second transceiver.
17. The method of claim 14, wherein each of the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate have an active plate side and a ground plate side, and facing the active plate side of the first capacitive plate and the active plate side of the second capacitive plate toward each other to form a differential capacitive coupling.
18. The method of claim 17, further comprising forming the first capacitive plate and the second capacitive plate by coupling one or more metal plates on a support formed from a composite material.
19. The method of claim 14, wherein the first transceiver has both the transmitting capability and the receiving capability for data communication through the first and second capacitive plates, and the second transceiver has both the receiving capability and the transmitting capability for data communication through the first and second capacitive plates.
20. The method of claim 19, further comprising implementing a bi-directional communication with data transferring from the first transceiver through the first capacitive plate to the second capacitive plate and from the second capacitive plate to the second transceiver in one direction and data transferring from the second transceiver through the second capacitive plate to the first capacitive plate and from the first capacitive plate to the first transceiver in another direction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] The present disclosure is illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the accompanying figures in which like reference numerals indicate similar elements and in which:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] The subject matter of aspects of the present disclosure is described with specificity herein to meet statutory requirements. However, the description itself is not intended to limit the scope of this patent.
[0026] In WPT systems, there is a need to establish a bi-directional communication between TX and RX sections. These WPT systems can include both power (WPT) and communication (data) on separate, independent channels. However, the communication channel may be realized on the same power channel via modulation techniques.
[0027] Embodiments of the present disclosure include a communication channel that is independent of the WPT channel, which may include plates that are capacitive coupled and set up as a short-range bi-directional communication in an WPT system. The shape of the plates (e.g., rectangular, circular, etc.) and the nature of the dielectric (e.g., air, plastics, etc.) are not specified because the present disclosure is based on the capacitive coupling physical phenomena, which can be formed between plates of different shapes and different dielectric materials.
[0028] Although various shapes can be used, for simplicity, in embodiments of the present disclosure, a parallel plate capacitor with an air gap dielectric is used to describe the capacitive coupling. The metal plates have a small surface area (e.g. mm.sup.2), separated from each other approximately 10-20 mm. When electric energy is supplied to one plate of the capacitor, an electric field is set up between the two plates. The electric field sets up a displacement current between the two plates, and hence energy is transferred. Typically, only a small amount of energy is needed to transfer just the information. This transfer of information can be identified by the presence (e.g., logic level 1) or not (e.g., logic level 0) of the energy on the plates. This energy can be supplied directly by an input/output of a microcontroller, or provided by a dedicated driving stage in order to have a stronger electric field, which leads to a better capacitive coupling.
[0029] In
[0030] Typically, only a half-duplex communication may be possible because two transceivers cannot transmit simultaneously. However, in
[0031] In order to construct a full-duplex communication in a WPT system with capacitive links, a bipolar configuration may be provided as shown in
[0032] With a pair of capacitive plates, the active plate side 310A of each capacitive plate can be placed facing each other to form a differential capacitive coupling structure. This structure has a resistance to noise because the ground plate side 310B introduces a boundary condition for the electric field.
[0033] In an exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, the capacitive plates may be formed with metal plates (e.g., copper) with the dimensions of 6 mm by 2.3 mm and provided on a support made from a composite material, such as FR4. FR4 is a composite material that is flame retardant and made of a fiberglass and epoxy resin. The copper plates may be spaced about 15 mm with a plastics material used as a dielectric. The capacitance of the copper plates may be approximately 25 femto-Farads. However, the capacitance between active plate side and the ground plate side may be about 1-2 pico-Farads. As a result, the optimal way to drive the active plates is in differential mode, which creates an alternate electric field for each pair of facing plates.
[0034] In
[0035] Because the architecture is symmetric, the architecture may be simplified to consider the communication flow from first transceiver 505 to second transceiver 515, in
[0036] With this simulation setup, a charge source model may produce a voltage variation of about 80 mV. To properly convert the charge, a charge amplifier converter can be used to work at 100 kHz. When executed, the simulation results are good in terms of shape and peak-to-peak amplitude. As a final step in the demodulation stage, an AC signal can be applied in a comparator with hysteresis to convert the analog signal to digital. In the performance of the simulation, the use of aluminum foil as a dielectric between capacitive plates 510 and 520 may yield the same results. The WPT system may be immune to metal objects.
[0037] Turning back to
[0038] In another embodiment of the present disclosure, WPT system 500 may be configured with capacitive plates 510 and 520 placed near wireless charging coils 550A and 550B that are configured to perform wireless power transfer through inductive coupling. This implementation illustrates that no interference may occur between the power transfer and the data communications despite the placement of capacitive plates 510 and 520 near coils 550A and 550B. The reason no interference may occur is because there are two different physical principles in action, power transfer in a magnetic field and capacitive coupling in an electrical field. As a result, an embodiment may be implemented that achieves space savings without loss of performance.
[0039] Turning now to
[0040] In conclusion, many different arrangements of the various components depicted, as well as components not shown, are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of embodiments of the present disclosure. Embodiments of the present disclosure have been described with the intent to be illustrative rather than restrictive. Certain features and sub-combinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and sub-combinations and are contemplated to be within the scope of the claims.