METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CHARGING BATTERIES IN PORTABLE DEVICES

20180342930 ยท 2018-11-29

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A method and apparatus for charging a battery with a finger actuated low mass spinner electromagnetically converts the mechanical spinning energy to the desired battery charging voltage. The charger may be a self-contained portable battery charger unit for use with any of multiple devices containing respective batteries, or it may be a permanent part of such a device. The spinner may be a modified fidget spinner to which a shaft or axle is fixedly attached to rotate about that axis with the spinner and has one or more permanent magnets secured for rotation therewith. Alternatively the spinner may be more like the fidget spinner, without an axle rotating therewith, and having magnets on its rotating arms. In either case, the magnetic fields of the rotating magnets induce voltage in one or more induction coils to generate a battery charging voltage.

    Claims

    1. A battery charger comprising: a finger-actuable spinner unit having plural radially extending arms configured to rotate about an axis in response to angularly directed finger flicks applied to one or more of said arms; at least one inductive coil of electrically conductive wire; at least one permanent magnet secured to said spinner unit and configured to rotate therewith about said axis, said magnet positioned relative to said coil so as to electromagnetically induce an AC voltage in said coil at an amplitude that varies with the speed of rotation of said spinner unit; and a voltage regulator circuit for converting said induced AC voltage to a substantially constant DC voltage for charging a battery.

    2. The battery charger of claim 1 wherein said spinner unit further comprises a shaft concentrically positioned on said axis and configured to rotate with said arms, and wherein said permanent magnet is secured to said shaft for rotation therewith.

    3. The battery charger of claim 2 wherein said permanent magnet is secured to a disc configured to rotate with said shaft.

    4. The battery charger of claim 1 wherein said at least one permanent magnet is secured to one of said arms.

    5. The battery charger of claim 1 comprising a plurality of said permanent magnets, one each secured to a respective one of said arms.

    6. The battery charger of claim 5 further comprising a plurality of said inductive coils, at least one each for each of said permanent magnets, wherein each permanent magnet is positioned relative to at least a respective one of said coils so as to electromagnetically induce an AC voltage in that coil at an amplitude that varies with the speed of rotation of said spinner unit.

    7. The battery charger of claim 1 further comprising a self-contained portable unit having a housing defining an enclosure, wherein said spinner unit is mounted on a housing wall exteriorly of said enclosure, and said at least one coil and said voltage regulator circuit are located in said enclosure.

    8. The battery charger of claim 7 wherein said at least one magnet is secured to one of said spinner arms externally of said enclosure.

    9. The battery charger of claim 7 wherein said spinner unit further comprises a shaft concentrically positioned on said axis and configured to rotate with said arms, and wherein said permanent magnet is secured to said shaft for rotation therewith within said enclosure.

    10. A method of charging a battery comprising manually applying finger flick forces to radially extending arms of a finger-actuable spinner unit to rotate the spinner about an axis; rotating at least one permanent magnet with said spinner unit to electromagnetically induce an AC voltage in at least one inductive coil; rectifying and filtering said AC voltage to provide a DC charging voltage; and applying said DC charging voltage to a battery.

    11. The method of claim 10 wherein rotating said permanent magnet includes rotating a shaft with said spinner unit and securing said permanent magnet to said shaft for rotation herewith.

    12. The method of claim 10 wherein rotating said permanent magnet includes securing said magnet to one of said radially extending arms.

    13. The method of claim 10 wherein applying said DC charging voltage includes connecting a cable between a housing in which the AC voltage is induced and a device containing the battery.

    14. The method of claim 10 wherein applying said DC charging voltage includes plugging a housing in which the AC voltage is induced directly into a device containing the battery.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0017] FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating the principles of the present invention.

    [0018] FIG. 2 is an elevation view showing the back of a mobile phone with a manually actuable spinner mounted thereon according to one embodiment of the invention.

    [0019] FIG. 3 is a perspective view of the mobile phone and spinner of FIG. 2 diagrammatically illustrating a user actuating the spinner.

    [0020] FIG. 4 is a partial side view of an embodiment of electromagnetic charging components that may be used in the embodiment of FIG. 2.

    [0021] FIG. 5 is an electrical schematic diagram of a voltage regulator circuit that may be used with the electromagnetic charging components of FIG. 4 to provide a charging voltage for the battery in the mobile phone of FIG. 2.

    [0022] FIG. 6 is a top plan view of an alternative spinner having magnets on it arms that may be used in another embodiment of the invention.

    [0023] FIG. 7 is an electrical schematic diagram of electromagnetic charging components that may be used with the spinner embodiment of FIG. 6.

    DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

    [0024] In a general sense, the present invention pertains to a self-contained portable battery charger wherein mechanical energy applied from a finger-actuated low mass spinner is converted to a voltage that can be used to supply a charging current to a battery. A schematic representation on this arrangement is shown in FIG. 1 to which reference is now made. A modified fidget spinner 10 is of the type generally known and sold as a fidget spinner, one version of which is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 9,914,063 (McCoskery), the entire disclosure in which is incorporated herein by reference. The spinner 10 has a plurality of arms, for example three arms 11, 12 and 13, radially extending from its rotation axis A and to which a shaft or axle 15 is fixedly attached, by adhesive, friction fit, diametric pins, etc., to rotate about axis A with the spinner. A permanent magnet 16 attached to and rotatable with the shaft 15 is positioned relative to a coil or coils 17 of electrically conductive wire so as to electromagnetically induce alternating current in the coil(s) for use in charging a battery in the manner described below.

    [0025] A charger housing or casing 14 is typically provided and defines an enclosure, the spinner being mounted externally thereof on a wall of the housing. The rotating shaft 15 extends from the spinner into the housing enclosure 14 through appropriate and conventional bushings, or the like. The permanent magnet 16 and coil(s) 17 are located within the housing enclosure 14 in positional relationship to permit the magnetic field of the magnet to pass through the coil(s) as shown. Also located in the housing enclosure is appropriate voltage regulator circuitry (FIG. 5, not shown in FIG. 1) for converting the induced current through coil 17 to a voltage appropriate for charging specified battery types.

    [0026] If the charger shown in FIG. 1 is a separate unit from the device containing the battery to be charged, connection of the charging voltage to the battery to be charged depends on the device containing the battery. For example, the charger may have a cable extending therefrom and terminating in a USB plug suitable for connecting to the USB receptacle of a mobile phone, or the like. Alternatively, the charger may have a permanent USB plug extending therefrom for directly engaging a USB receptacle at the device to be charged, thereby eliminating the need for a cable. As further alternative, the charger may be structurally attached to a wall of the device (e.g., a mobile phone) containing the battery to be charged, and the coil(s) 17 and the voltage regulator circuit may be located within that device.

    [0027] When the spinner is spun by a flicking-type force applied angularly to one or more of its arms by a person's finger, the shaft 15 and attached magnet 16 rotate so that the magnetic field around the top and bottom of coil(s) 17 constantly changes between a north pole N and a south pole S. This rotational movement of the magnetic field results in an alternating emf (i.e., a voltage) being induced in the coil(s). The magnitude of the electromagnetic induction (i.e., the amplitude of the induced voltage) is a function of the magnetic flux density, the length of coil wire (i.e., the number of loops in the wire and the coil diameter), the number of coils and the rotational speed of the spinner (i.e., the rate or velocity at which the magnetic field changes within the coil wire). It will be understood that more than one coil 17 may be provided and more than one permanent magnet may be provided to increase the emf generated per revolution of spinner 10.

    [0028] An embodiment of the invention in which the charger is structurally attached to a wall of a mobile phone containing the battery to be charged is illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3. The spinner 10 is secured externally, on the back or rear wall of a mobile phone 20, it being understood that the coil(s) and electrical circuitry are located proximate the battery inside the enclosure defined by the phone housing. As shown in FIG. 3, the phone 20 may be held in the palm of the hand of a user so that that spinner can be rapidly and continuously rotated by multiple successive flicks of the user's thumb applied angularly to the arms 11, 12, 13 of the spinner. Alternatively, the user may hold the phone 20 in one hand and apply successive flicks with a finger or fingers of his/her other hand. As a further alternative the phone 20 may be placed on a surface, or secured in place (e.g., on the user's belt by clip or loop, in a holster, etc.), and successive flicks may be applied by the user's fingers of either hand. Importantly, in any orientation of the phone, the user can apply the flicks at any time, as a conscious effort to charge the phone battery, or while performing some other unrelated activity, or as a release of nervous energy or stress, etc. Whatever the reason, the spinning maintains the phone battery sufficiently charged for ready use in substantially any environment or location without the need for a nearby AC voltage receptacle.

    [0029] Referring to FIG. 4, axle 15, which is connected for rotation with the spinner 10 as described above, may have a disc 21, such as a flywheel, concentrically secured thereto for rotations therewith. The disc has one or more magnets (not shown in FIG. 4) secured thereto in proximity to one or more inductive coils 22 from which wiring 23 conducts current to a suitable voltage regulator as described.

    [0030] A conventional voltage regulator circuit is illustrated in FIG. 5 and may be electrically connected across the inductive coil(s) 17 (or coils 22 of FIG. 4). The circuit includes a full wave rectifier diode bridge 25 having its input terminals connected across coil(s) 17. The rectified output voltage of the bridge is connected across a filtering capacitor 26 in order to provide a relatively constant DC output voltage substantially equal to the peak AC voltage of the emf induced in coil(s) 17. The output terminals of the regulator circuit are connected across the battery 27 to be charged. The regulator circuit is preferably physically located with the coil(s) 17 in a separate housing 14 for charger or in the housing of the device containing the battery to be charged.

    [0031] In an alternative embodiment the permanent magnet(s) need not be located on the axle of the spinner unit. For example, referring to FIG. 6, a spinner 30 may have a permanent magnet 34, 35, 36 on each spinner arm 31, 32, 33, respectively. The spinner 30 in this embodiment does not require an axle that rotates with the spinner arms but may be more like conventional fidget spinners in which the arms rotate relative to a central body portion with the aid of a ball bearing assembly as described in the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 9,914,063 (McCoskery). The central portion is fixedly secured to the outside surface of a wall of the charger housing if the charger is physically separable from devices containing a battery to be charged. In embodiments where the charger is structurally part of the device containing the battery, the central body portion of spinner 30 is secured to the outside surface of a wall of that device. In either case, the spinner arms 31, 32, 33 are free to rotate together about an axis comprising the central body portion, and the magnetic fields of permanent magnets 34, 35, 36 rotatably interact with one or more coils located inside the housing to which spinner 30 is secured as shown in FIG. 7.

    [0032] Referring to FIG. 7, a spinner 40 is schematically illustrated as being rotatable about an axis 41 and having three permanent magnets 42, 43, 44 equally spaced angularly about axis 41. Magnets 42, 43, 44 corresponding, for example to magnets 34, 35, 36 of FIG. 6. Six coils 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56 are positioned peripherally about the magnets such that the field of each magnet induces an emf in each coil as that magnet rotates past that coil. The coils 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56 are electrically connected in series such that the output voltage induced in all of the coils is additive. That output voltage is applied across a voltage regulator circuit (for example the circuit of FIG. 5) from which a battery charging voltage is provided.

    [0033] In the embodiments described herein, the spinners used to generate battery charging voltage have three radially extending arms that are symmetrically spaced 120 from one another. It will be appreciated that two, four, five, six or more arms may be provided without departing from the concepts of the present invention. Likewise, although having the arms equally angularly spaced is desirable, it is not a requirement for achieving the results described herein.

    [0034] The material from which the spinners described herein are made is preferably a polymer or wood or non-magnetic metal (e.g., aluminum) so as to not interfere with the inductive conversion of the spinning energy of the magnets to the coils. The size of the spinners used with the present invention is determined by the convenience of a user being able to easily apply a flicking force to the spinner arms with a finger.

    [0035] The invention provides a method and apparatus for charging a battery with a finger actuated low mass spinner, the mechanical spinning energy from which is electromagnetically converted to the desired battery charging voltage. The charger may be a self-contained portable battery charger unit for use with any of multiple devices containing respective batteries, or it may be a permanent part of such a device. The spinner may be a modified fidget spinner to which a shaft or axle is fixedly attached to rotate about that axis with the spinner and has one or more permanent magnets secured for rotation therewith. Alternatively the spinner may be more like the fidget spinner, without an axle rotating therewith, having magnets on its rotating arms. In either case, the magnetic fields of the rotating magnets induce voltage in one or more induction coils to generate a charging voltage.

    [0036] Having described preferred embodiments of new and improved methods and apparatus for charging batteries in portable devices, it is believed that other modifications, variations and changes will be suggested to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings set forth herein. It is therefore to be understood that all such variations, modifications and changes are believed to fall within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims. Although specific terms are employed herein, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.