Integrated rectifier and boost converter for boosting voltage received from wireless power transmission waves
09800172 · 2017-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02M3/158
ELECTRICITY
G05F1/67
PHYSICS
H02M1/0058
ELECTRICITY
H02M3/1588
ELECTRICITY
H02M7/06
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/0022
ELECTRICITY
Y02B70/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A novel integrated rectifier and boost converter circuit architecture is disclosed. The rectifier architecture includes a plurality of identical half-bridge rectifiers connected to receiving antennas to convert wireless AC power into DC power. The integrated rectifier may be coupled in series with a charging inductor in a boost converter. The inductor may discharge upon operation of two micro-controller-driven switching transistors using predetermined threshold and timing scheme to turn on/off. The rectifier architecture may provide high power densities, improve efficiency at larger load currents, and may be enabled in an integrated circuit with eight RF signal inputs, eight half-bridge rectifiers, and eight DC outputs ganged together as single feed into the boost converter. The rectifier circuit topology may include a comparator driven by the boost controller with a proprietary algorithm which suits control for a maximum power point tracking functionality, and an external micro-controller for additional control of the boost converter.
Claims
1. A wireless power receiver comprising: a controller coupled with a comparator; a rectifier coupled to an antenna of the wireless power receiver, the rectifier being configured to rectify energy from wireless power transmission waves received by the antenna into a first voltage; a boost converter coupled to the rectifier, the boost converter being configured to increase the first voltage to a second voltage based on instructions from the controller; and the controller configured to control an amount of increase in voltage from the first voltage to the second voltage based on a comparison, performed by the comparator, of the first voltage with a reference voltage generated by the controller.
2. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, wherein: the wireless power receiver is coupled with an electronic device; and the amount of increase in voltage from the first voltage to the second voltage is controlled by the controller based also at least in part on a power level required by the electronic device.
3. The wireless power receiver of claim 2, wherein the electronic device houses the wireless power receiver.
4. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, wherein the antenna receives the wireless power transmission waves from a remote wireless power transmitter.
5. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, wherein the wireless power transmission waves are radio frequency power transmission waves.
6. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, wherein the controller is a microcontroller.
7. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, wherein: the antenna is one of a plurality of antennas; and the rectifier is one a plurality of rectifiers, and each of the plurality of rectifiers, including the rectifier, is configured to rectify energy from wireless power transmission waves received by the plurality of antennas into the first voltage.
8. The wireless power receiver of claim 7, wherein: the wireless power receiver is coupled with an electronic device; and a number of rectifiers is included in the plurality of rectifiers so as to supply a power level power required by the electronic device.
9. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, further comprising an inductor coupled to the rectifier, the inductor being configured to: receive the first voltage from the rectifier, and provide the second voltage to an output terminal of the boost converter.
10. The wireless power receiver of claim 9, wherein: the wireless power receiver further comprises a plurality of transistors coupled to the inductor and the controller; and the controller is configured to control the amount of increase in voltage by controlling the plurality of transistors.
11. The wireless power receiver of claim 1, wherein: the energy rectified by the rectifier is an alternating current; and the antenna is configured to convert energy from the wireless power transmission waves into the alternating current.
12. An electronic device comprising: a wireless power receiver, comprising: a controller coupled with a comparator; a rectifier coupled to an antenna of the wireless power receiver, the rectifier being configured to rectify energy from wireless power transmission waves received by the antenna into a first voltage; a boost converter coupled to the rectifier, the boost converter being configured to increase the first voltage to a second voltage based on instructions from the controller; and the controller configured to control an amount of increase in voltage from the first voltage to the second voltage based on a comparison, performed by the comparator, of the first voltage with a reference voltage generated by the controller.
13. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein: the amount of increase in voltage from the first voltage to the second voltage is controlled by the controller based also at least in part on a power level required by the electronic device.
14. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein the electronic device houses the wireless power receiver.
15. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein the antenna receives the wireless power transmission waves from a remote wireless power transmitter.
16. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein the wireless power transmission waves are radio frequency power transmission waves.
17. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein the controller is a microcontroller.
18. The electronic device of claim 12, wherein the wireless power receiver further comprises an inductor coupled to the rectifier, the inductor being configured to: receive the first voltage from the rectifier, and provide the second voltage to an output terminal of the boost converter.
19. The electronic device of claim 18, wherein: the wireless power receiver further comprises a plurality of transistors coupled to the inductor and the controller; and the controller is configured to control the amount of increase in voltage by controlling the plurality of transistors.
20. A method of receiving wireless power from a remote wireless power transmitter, the method comprising: at a wireless power receiver having a controller coupled with a comparator, an antenna, a rectifier coupled with the antenna, and a boost converter coupled with the rectifier: rectifying, by the rectifier, energy from wireless power transmission waves received by the antenna into a first voltage; increasing, by the boost converter, the first voltage to a second voltage based on instructions from the controller; and controlling, by the controller, an amount of increase in voltage from the first voltage to the second voltage based on a comparison, performed by the comparator, of the first voltage with a reference voltage generated by the controller.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present disclosure can be better understood by referring to the following figures. The components in the figures are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being place upon illustrating the principles of the disclosure. In the figures, reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the different views.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) The present disclosure is here described in detail with reference to embodiments illustrated in the drawings, which form a part here. Other embodiments may be used and/or other changes may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the present disclosure. The illustrative embodiments described in the detailed description are not meant to be limiting of the subject matter presented here.
(8) As used here, the following terms may have the following definitions:
(9) “Electronic device” refers to a device depending on the principles of electronics and using the manipulation of electron flow for its operation. In present disclosure, refers to a device able to communicate using one or more suitable wireless technologies.
(10) “Wireless receiver” refers to a device including at least one antenna element, at least one rectifying circuit and at least one power converter, which may utilize pockets of energy for powering, or charging a wireless device.
(11) “Rectifier” refers to an electrical device that converts alternating current (AC), which periodically reverses direction, to direct current (DC), which flows in only one direction.
(12) “Synchronous rectifier” refers to a power transmission circuit including active rectifiers controlled by switches such as transistors for improving the efficiency of rectification. The control circuitry for active rectification usually uses sensors for the voltage of the input AC to open the transistors at the correct times to allow current to flow in the correct direction.
(13) “Switching transistor” refers to a semiconductor device used to switch electronic signals and electrical power in analog or digital circuits.
(14) “Comparator” refers to a specialized high-gain differential amplifier used to measure and digitize analog signals, or to compare two voltages and determine whether a given input voltage is under voltage or over voltage.
(15) The present disclosure may provide rectifier architecture designed to include a circuit topology integrated with a boost converter for wireless receivers of a plurality of system configurations with maximum power transfer control. The design of the integrated rectifier circuit topology of present disclosure may include a plurality of half-bridge rectifiers whose power conversion and transmission may be controlled by switching devices in the boost converter. For power conversion in the integrated rectifier, the voltage output from a wireless transmitter is received by wireless receiver antenna elements and may be transferred as output voltage to other modules in the wireless receiver.
(16) Simplified Circuit Topology of an Integrated Rectifier and Boost Converter
(17)
(18) Present embodiment may include at least one antenna element 106 which may convert RF waves or pockets of energy into electrical power. Antenna element 106 may be operatively coupled with one or more rectifiers 102. RF waves may exhibit a sinusoidal shape within a voltage amplitude and power range that may depend on characteristics of a wireless power transmitter (not shown). Because of this sinusoidal nature of RF waves, the voltage or power generated by rectifier 102 may be variable. As an illustrative embodiment, and not by way of limitation, the alternating current (AC) voltage or power generated by antenna element 106 from transmitted RF waves or pocket of energy may vary from about 0 volts or 0 watt to about 5 volts at 3 watts.
(19) Antenna element 106 may include suitable antenna types for operating in frequency bands similar to frequency bands, such as 900 MHz, 2.4 GHz, and 5.7 GHz, amongst others, from the wireless transmitter. These frequency bands comply with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations part 18 (Industrial, Scientific and Medical equipment). Antenna element 106 may include vertical or horizontal polarization, right hand or left hand polarization, elliptical polarization, or other suitable polarizations as well as suitable polarization combinations. Using multiple polarizations may be beneficial in devices where there may not be a preferred orientation during usage or whose orientation may vary continuously through time. For devices with well-defined orientations, there might be a preferred polarization for antennas which may dictate a ratio for the number of antennas of a given polarization. Suitable antenna types may include patch antennas with heights from about ⅛ inches to about 6 inches and widths from about ⅛ inches to about 6 inches. Patch antennas may have the advantage that polarization may depend on connectivity, i.e. depending on which side the patch is fed, the polarization may change.
(20) Rectifier 102 may include diodes, resistors, inductors, transistors and/or capacitors to rectify the AC voltage generated by antenna element 106 to direct current (DC) voltage. Rectifier 102 may be placed as close as technically possible to antenna element 106 to minimize losses. In one embodiment, rectifier 102 may operate in synchronous mode, in which case rectifier 102 may include switching elements, transistors, which may improve the efficiency of rectification. Half-bridge rectifier 102 may be used to produce an output with a fixed polarity that is independent of the polarity of the input.
(21) Transmission of power converted by rectifier 102 may be controlled using either an active-drive approach to provide control signals with electronic circuitry which may have timing information from voltage or current waveforms within the power circuit, or a passive-drive approach in which control signals may be directly provided or through passive circuit elements from a waveform in the power circuit.
(22) When an alternating RF signal is received by antenna element 106 from the wireless transmitter, a direct voltage output, V.sub.DC, may be drawn from the output terminals of half-bridge rectifier 102, including two diodes, D.sub.1 and D.sub.2, respectively identified as diode 108 and diode 110, which may be wired in series upstream and connected to the output terminal. Antenna element 106 is connected in series to capacitor 112, which is connected in series to inductor 114, both acting as the resonant filter for the power signal being transferred from wireless transmitter and received by antenna element 106. Additionally, rectifier 102 may be connected in parallel to a second filter capacitor 116 and in series with charging inductor 118.
(23) When the polarity of the alternating RF signal received may be positive, current flows through the first upstream diode 108 and when the polarity of the alternating RF signal received is negative, current flows through second upstream diode 110.
(24) Boost converter 104 may include charging inductor 118, but it may be laid out internally of rectifier 102. In the present embodiment inductor 118 may be preferably laid out as an internal component of boost converter 104 and may be designed with an appropriate, smaller form factor and scaled to a plurality of values, such that maximum power that may be converted may not saturate inductor 118. Boost converter 104 may convert the variable DC output voltage of rectifier 102 into a more stable DC voltage that can be used by components of a wireless receiver and/or electronic device housing the wireless receiver. Boost converter 104 may operate as a step-up DC-to-DC converter to increase the voltage from rectifier 102 to a voltage level suitable for proper operation of other modules in the wireless receiver. In addition, boost converter 104 may reduce or eliminate rail-to-rail deviations. Additional filtering capabilities, capacitor 126, may be added at the output of boost converter 104 as shown in
(25) As the voltage or power generated from RF waves may be zero at some instants of wireless power transmission, circuit topology 100 may include circuit elements to store energy or electric charge from the output voltage produced by rectifier 102. In this way, inductor 118, may deliver continuous voltage or power to the output terminal of boost converter 104, where a load (not shown) may represent a battery or internal circuitry of electronic device requiring continuous powering or charging.
(26) When the required level of voltage may be present at the output terminal of rectifier 102, micro-controller 120 may turn switching transistor 122, Q.sub.1, on for current to flow through inductor 118, which may start storing energy. Then, according to a predetermined control switching scheme in micro-controller 120, switching transistor 122 may be turned off Subsequently, inductor 118 may discharge its stored energy by sending current to switching transistor 124, Q.sub.2, which may be presently in off state. Due to this current and the state of switching transistor 124, the voltage may rise at the input of switching transistor 124. At some level of voltage in accordance with the switching control scheme, micro-controller 120 may turn switching transistor 124 on for a particular amount of time allowing energy transmission at a level of voltage that is higher than the original voltage at capacitor 116, C.sub.2. Switching transistors 122, 124 may be identical field-effect transistors, bipolar junction transistors, insulated-gate bipolar transistors, or gallium nitride transistors, amongst others.
(27) Micro-controller 120 may be an integrated controller circuit driving switching transistor 122, 124 for power transfer to other modules of the wireless receiver and it may be a programmable or non-programmable type controller.
(28) Circuit Architecture of an Integrated Rectifier and Boost Converter
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(30) Better efficiency and power density may not be achieved using one sole rectifier 102 as shown in
(31) In one embodiment, inductor 118 may be included in the circuit topology of integrated rectifier 202. In another embodiment inductor 118 may be externally placed next to boost converter 104. The size and shape of the external inductor 118 may depend on the electrical constraints and parameters of the circuit.
(32) As may be seen in
(33) Integrated Circuit of Rectifiers and Boost Converter
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(35) Given that circuit architecture 200, including rectifiers 102 of circuit topology 100, may be an expensive implementation using discrete components for rectifier 102, a configuration of eight rectifiers 102 may be enabled in integrated circuit 300.
(36) Integrated circuit 300 may include eight RF input terminals 302, eight rectifiers 102, and eight DC output lines 304 connected together to provide the total power extracted from RF signals received by antenna elements 106 through a single feed line 306 into boost converter 104. Integrated circuit 300 may also include synchronous half-bridge rectifiers 102.
(37) Additionally, integrated circuit 300 may enable an implementation of circuit architecture 200 that may be capable of operating over a large range of frequencies. This capability may not be possible using discrete components. Moreover, inductor 118, shown in
(38) Capacitor 116 in each rectifier 102 may be substituted in the package by the layout of bonded wires used for output lines 304, thus significantly reducing the size of integrated circuit 300 and increasing power transmission efficiency.
(39) Control-Driven Integrated Rectifier and Boost Converter Circuit Topology
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(41) Circuit architecture 200 may include micro-controller 120, in boost converter 104, to control the RF power that may be extracted. Micro-controller 120 may drive comparator 402 to which a reference signal, V.sub.REF, may be fed to compare it with the extracted DC waveforms and enabling a proprietary algorithm to turn switch transistors 122, 124 on at the appropriate voltage point and particular amount of time to suit maximum power point tracking (MPPT) functionality, charging and discharging inductor 118 as described in
(42) Micro-controller 120, based on voltage measurements, may control the power or voltage delivered at the output terminals of boost converter 104, and therefore, adjust the current limits supplied to other modules in the wireless receiver.
(43) An MPPT algorithm may be executed by micro-controller 120 to control and optimize the amount of power that boost converter 104 may pull from antenna elements 106. Accordingly, MPPT functionality may be enabled having micro-controller 120 to monitor the power levels converted. Subsequently, the comparison of DC voltage at the output terminal of rectifier 102, V.sub.DC, with the voltage reference, V.sub.REF, may be used by micro-controller 120 to detect the maximum power point in the RF signals received by antenna elements 106 and for the proprietary algorithm to adjust the level of power extracted in conformity with the MPPT data in micro-controller 120.
(44) This active-drive approach of control may be also implemented including comparator 402 in integrated circuit 300.
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(46) Circuit topology 500 may include all components in circuit topology 400, to which the external system micro-controller 502 may be added to provide additional control of boost converter 104 in a wireless receiver (not shown).
(47) Micro-controller 120 in circuit topology 400, may drive comparator 402 to which a reference signal, V.sub.REF, may be fed to compare it with the extracted DC waveforms and enabling a proprietary algorithm to turn switch transistors 122, 124 on at the appropriate voltage point and particular amount of time to suit maximum power point tracking (MPPT) functionality, charging and discharging inductor 118. This active-drive approach of control may be also implemented including comparator 402 in integrated circuit 300.
(48) System micro-controller 502 may process information sent by the wireless receiver through its communications component for determining optimum times and locations for pocket-forming and may also operate in conjunction with an EEPROM module to run an algorithm for controlling the operation of boost converter 104 according to load requirements. System micro-controller 502 may actively monitor the overall operation of the wireless receiver by taking one or more power measurements at different nodes or sections of the wireless receiver. For example, system micro-controller 502 may measure how much voltage or power is being delivered at rectifier 102, boost converter 104, and other components in the wireless receiver, including the connected load and may communicate these power measurements to the connected load so that electronic device may know how much power it can pull from the wireless receiver. System micro-controller 502 may provide additional feedback to the boost converter 104.
(49) While various aspects and embodiments have been disclosed, other aspects and embodiments may be contemplated. The various aspects and embodiments disclosed here are for purposes of illustration and are not intended to be limiting, with the true scope and spirit being indicated by the following claims.