NEAR FIELD, FULL DUPLEX DATA LINK FOR USE IN STATIC AND DYNAMIC RESONANT INDUCTION WIRELESS CHARGING
20170294941 · 2017-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02J50/80
ELECTRICITY
Y02T90/12
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 full duplex, low latency, near field data link controls a static and/or dynamic resonant induction, wireless power transfer system used for recharging electric vehicles and other electrically powered devices. A coherent transponder configuration enables low complexity synchronous detection and positive rejection of signals originating from nearby and adjacent vehicles. A reference crystal oscillator in the ground side apparatus provides frequency synchronization for both the forward and the return data links. Transmission is by means of near field magnetic induction between pairs of loop antennas which, together with the effective waveguide below cutoff structure comprised by the vehicle underbody and the ground surface, largely restrict signal propagation to the area in the immediate vicinity of the system antennas.
Claims
1. A full duplex data communication system employing near field inductive transmission, comprising: a first transmit/receive system that transmits a first signal over a first inductive link and receives a second signal over a second inductive link; and a second transmit/receive system that receives the first signal over the first inductive link and transmits the second signal over the second inductive link, wherein said second signals are derived from said first signals and said first and second signals are frequency coherent.
2. A system as in claim 1, wherein said first and second signals are frequency synchronized and frequencies of the first and second signals are related by a ratio M/N where M and N are both integers.
3. A system as in claim 2, wherein said first and second signals have an integer harmonic relationship with each other, where the integer is not equal to 1.
4. A system as in claim 1, wherein the first and second signals transmitted over said first and second inductive links are modulated with data for the operation of a transponder based communications link that controls a wireless inductive power transfer system.
5. A system as in claim 4, wherein said first and second transmit/receive systems each comprise an amplitude shift modulator that modulates said data for the operation of the transponder based communications link to generate a rectangular wave transmission waveform with Fourier series coefficients selected to give intrinsic integer harmonic rejection so as to suppress coherent transponder harmonic self-interference between said first and second signals.
6. A system as in claim 5, wherein said Fourier series coefficients β.sub.n are given by:
7. A system as in claim 5, wherein said amplitude shift modulator encodes logic one bits as full signal amplitude of a supply voltage and encodes logic zero bits as one half of the full signal amplitude of the supply voltage.
8. A system as in claim 4, wherein said first and second transmit/receive systems each comprise a phase or frequency modulator that modulates said data for the operation of the transponder based communications link.
9. A system as in claim 4, wherein said first transmit/receive system is on a ground side and said second transmit/receive system is on a vehicle side of a wireless inductive power transfer system for wirelessly charging a vehicle, and wherein said first and second signals have carrier frequencies sufficiently low such that the wavelengths of said carrier frequencies are larger than a distance between a conductive underbody of the vehicle and a surface of the ground such that the vehicle underbody and the ground surface function as a waveguide below a waveguide propagation cutoff frequency.
10. A system as in claim 9, wherein at least one of said first and second inductive links is multiplexed onto wireless power transfer coils.
11. A system as in claim 9, wherein said first transmit/receive system comprises a first transmit antenna and a first receive antenna and said second transmit/receive system comprises a second transmit antenna and a second receive antenna, and wherein said vehicle conductive underbody and the surface of the ground contain the first and second signals within an immediate vicinity of the first and second transmit antennas.
12. A system as in claim 11, wherein each of said first and second transmit and receive antennas are smaller than a wavelength of said carrier frequencies whereby when the first transmit antenna and second receive antenna and second transmit antenna and first receive antenna are in close physical proximity the first transmit antenna and second receive antenna and second transmit antenna and first receive antenna respectively have sufficient mutual magnetic field coupling that enables both forward and reverse communications paths between the first and second transmit/receive systems without significant free space propagation.
13. A system as in claim 11, wherein said first transmit antenna and said first receive antenna are consolidated into a single loop antenna having an antenna duplexer that separates and forwards the first and second signals.
14. A system as in claim 13, further comprising a frequency multiplexing circuit that discriminates signals in said first and second inductive links and an electronic signal cancellation circuit functionally disposed between said single loop antenna and a receiver of said first transmit/receive system.
15. A system as in claim 14, wherein said electronic signal cancellation circuit comprises a splitter connected to said single loop antenna so as to receive a signal to be canceled, said splitter providing a first output of said splitter to a first input of a mixer and a sample of the signal to be canceled is provided to a phase shifter and an output of said phase shifter is provided to a second input of said mixer, wherein an output of said mixer is provided to a control input of said phase shifter to create a phase locked loop to ensure that a signal at said first input of the mixer is 90 degrees out of phase with a signal at said second input of the mixer.
16. A system as in claim 15, wherein a second output of said splitter is provided to an amplitude control loop and the output of said phase shifter is provided to a 90 degree phase shifter to create a 180 degree out-of-phase version of the signal to be canceled for combination with the second output of said splitter at a signal combiner.
17. A system as in claim 1, wherein said first transmit/receive system comprises a first modulator that generates said first signal, a synchronous detector, a reference oscillator that provides a modulating signal at a first frequency to said first modulator, and a frequency multiplier that multiplies the first frequency of said modulating signal by an integer for application to said synchronous detector.
18. A system as in claim 17, wherein said second transmit/receive system comprises a homodyne detector that synchronous detects and full-wave rectifies said first signal, a frequency multiplier that multiplies the received first frequency of the modulating signal by said integer, and a second modulator that generates said second signal at a second frequency that is said integer multiple of said first frequency.
19. A system as in claim 18, wherein said first frequency is 13.56 MHz and said second frequency is 40.68 MHz.
20. A system as in claim 3, wherein said first transmit/receive system comprises a harmonic cancellation circuit that cancels integer harmonics of said first signal at a frequency of said second signal to avoid self-interference between said first and second signals.
21. A system as in claim 20, wherein said harmonic cancellation circuit comprises a walking ring counter clocked at an integer multiple of said first frequency and a pair of logic gates that decodes the walking ring counter to produce a rectangular wave that drives a first transmit antenna of said first transmit/receive system.
22. A system as in claim 21, wherein said harmonic cancellation circuit further comprises a resonating capacitor and radio frequency chokes connected to a voltage source, said radio frequency chokes and resonating capacitor combining with an inductance of said first transmit antenna to form a resonant circuit that provides suppression of integer harmonics of said first frequency.
23. A system as in claim 1, wherein said second transmit/receive system comprises a variable gain controlled amplifier that increases a signal amplitude of the first signal received over the first inductive link and a limiting amplifier that removes received signal amplitude variations from an output of said variable gain controller amplifier, an output of said limiting amplifier indicating an instantaneous polarity of the first signal received over the first inductive link.
24. A system as in claim 23, further comprising a multiplicative mixer that receives the output of said variable gain controlled amplifier at a first input and the output of the limiting amplifier at a second input, an output of said multiplicative mixer providing a full wave rectification of the first signal received over the first inductive link.
25. A system as in claim 24, further comprising a level detection circuit responsive to an output of said multiplicative mixer to extract amplitude modulated data using amplitude level detection from said full wave rectification of the first signal received over the first inductive link and to provide a control signal to an automatic gain control circuit that provides a feedback control signal to said variable gain controlled amplifier.
26. A system as in claim 3, wherein said first transmit/receive system comprises a synchronous detector that synchronously detects said second signal.
27. A system as in claim 26, wherein said first transmit/receive system comprises a synchronous detection reference signal generator comprising a frequency multiplier that multiplies a frequency of said first signal by said integer and a phase shifter controlled by quadrature channel phase detection and phase lock loop control from an output of said synchronous detector.
28. A system as in claim 27, wherein said first transmit/receive system further comprises a level detection circuit responsive to an output of said synchronous detector to extract amplitude modulated data using amplitude level detection of the synchronously detected second signal, said level detection circuit including a full wave precision amplifier that receives said synchronously detected second signal and provides an output to a peak hold capacitor that holds a maximum detected voltage level output of said full wave precision amplifier to a constant value using a control signal from an automatic gain control circuit set to a reference voltage.
29. A system as in claim 28, wherein said level detection circuit further comprises a carrier detection voltage comparator that compares the output of said synchronous detector to a percentage of the reference voltage to determine if a carrier is present in the output of said synchronous detector.
30. A system as in claim 26, wherein said synchronous detector comprises coherent but not phase synchronized I and Q detection channels where a detected amplitude of the received second signal is a root mean square of the I and Q channels and a phase angle of the received second signal is an arctangent of a ratio of the I and Q channels.
31. A method of providing full duplex data communication employing near field inductive transmission between a first transmit/receive system and a second transmit/receive system, comprising the steps of: the first transmit/receive system transmitting a first signal over a first inductive link; the second transmit/receive system receiving the first signal over the first inductive link; the second transmit/receive system transmitting a second signal over a second inductive link; and the first transmit/receive system receiving the second signal over the second inductive link, wherein said second signals are derived from said first signals and said first and second signals are frequency coherent.
32. The method as in claim 31, further comprising frequency synchronizing said first and second signals and relating frequencies of the first and second signals by a ratio M/N where M and N are both integers.
33. The method as in claim 32, wherein said first and second signals have an integer harmonic relationship with each other, where the integer is not equal to 1.
34. The method as in claim 31, further comprising modulating the first and second signals transmitted over said first and second inductive links with data for the operation of a transponder based communications link that controls a wireless inductive power transfer system.
35. The method as in claim 34, wherein said modulating comprises amplitude modulating said data for the operation of the transponder based communications link to generate a rectangular wave transmission waveform with Fourier series coefficients selected to give intrinsic integer harmonic rejection so as to suppress coherent transponder harmonic self-interference between said first and second signals.
36. The method as in claim 35, wherein said Fourier series coefficients β.sub.n are given by:
37. The method as in claim 35, further comprising encoding logic one bits as full signal amplitude of a supply voltage and encoding logic zero bits as one half of the full signal amplitude of the supply voltage.
38. The method as in claim 34, wherein said first transmit/receive system is on a ground side and said second transmit/receive system is on a vehicle side of said wireless inductive power transfer system and is adapted to wirelessly charge a vehicle, further comprising providing said first and second signals with carrier frequencies sufficiently low such that the wavelengths of said carrier frequencies are larger than a distance between a conductive underbody of the vehicle and a surface of the ground such that the vehicle underbody and the ground surface function as a waveguide below a waveguide propagation cutoff frequency.
39. The method as in claim 38, further comprising multiplexing at least one of said first and second inductive links onto wireless power transfer coils.
40. The method as in claim 34, wherein modulating the first and second signals comprises modulating said first and second signals with data using both amplitude and angle modulation.
41. The method as in claim 33, further comprising cancelling integer harmonics of said first signal at a frequency of said second signal to avoid self-interference between said first and second signals.
42. A method of wireless charging a vehicle using a wireless inductive power transfer system, comprising: establishing a full duplex communication link between said vehicle and a charging transmitter, said full duplex communication link employing near field inductive transmission between a first transmit/receive system at said charging transmitter and a second transmit/receive system on said vehicle, comprising the steps of: the first transmit/receive system transmitting a first signal over a first inductive link, the second transmit/receive system receiving the first signal over the first inductive link, the second transmit/receive system transmitting a second signal over a second inductive link, and the first transmit/receive system receiving the second signal over the second inductive link, wherein said second signals are derived from said first signals and said first and second signals are frequency coherent; and controlling wireless power transfer between said charging transmitter and said vehicle by sending control signals over said full-duplex communication link.
43. The method as in claim 42, further comprising frequency synchronizing said first and second signals and relating frequencies of the first and second signals by a ratio M/N where M and N are both integers.
44. The method as in claim 43, wherein said first and second signals have an integer harmonic relationship with each other, where the integer is not equal to 1.
45. The method as in claim 42, further comprising detecting a change caused by an overhead vehicle in impedance or mutual impedance between isolated electromagnetic elements of at least one of a wireless power transfer coil, alignment coils, and a near field communications antenna of the charging transmitter and initiating transmission of said control signals over said first inducting link when said change is detected.
46. A method of dynamically wirelessly charging a vehicle using a wireless inductive power transfer system including a plurality of charging transmitters installed in a roadway, comprising: establishing a full duplex communication link between said vehicle and a first charging transmitter, said full duplex communication link employing frequency coherent near field inductive transmission between a first transmit/receive system at said first charging transmitter and a second transmit/receive system on said vehicle; said first charging transmitter and/or a vehicle transmitter providing at least one of location, timing, and speed information regarding the vehicle to a second charging transmitter; said second charging transmitter using said at least one of location, timing, and speed information to determine a time when the vehicle's wireless charging receiving device will be positioned over the second charging transmitter; and said second charging transmitter providing wireless power transfer at the determined time to provide wireless power transfer to the vehicle, whereby the vehicle is charged as the vehicle passes over said plurality of charging transmitters.
47. The method as in claim 46, wherein establishing a full duplex communication link between said vehicle and the first charging transmitter comprises the steps of: the first transmit/receive system transmitting a first signal over a first inductive link, the second transmit/receive system receiving the first signal over the first inductive link, the second transmit/receive system transmitting a second signal over a second inductive link, and the first transmit/receive system receiving the second signal over the second inductive link, wherein said second signals are derived from said first signals and said first and second signals are frequency coherent.
48. The method as in claim 47, further comprising frequency synchronizing said first and second signals and relating frequencies of the first and second signals by a ratio M/N where M and N are both integers.
49. The method as in claim 48, wherein said first and second signals have an integer harmonic relationship with each other, where the integer is not equal to 1.
50. The method as in claim 46, further comprising establishing a pre-sequence firing procedure to establish a traveling wave of magnetic energy that moves at the same rate as the vehicle's wireless charging receiving device.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] The foregoing and other beneficial features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description in connection with the attached figures, of which:
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
[0025] An exemplary embodiment of the invention will be described with respect to
[0026]
[0027] The invention described herein and shown in
[0031] In the exemplary embodiment shown in
[0032] The forward path signal generation begins with reference quartz crystal oscillator 90 operating at a frequency of 13.560 MHz. This signal is applied to a waveform generation stage including 3.sup.rd harmonic cancellation circuit 22 and amplitude shift modulator 24 that together comprise the modulator 20 of
[0033] From the “Engineering Mathematics Handbook, Third Edition, Tuma, Jan J., McGraw-Hill 1987 ISBN 0-07-065443-3, the Fourier series coefficients for the modified sine waveform shown in
[0034] Of the first twenty Fourier series coefficients, all but six are zero. The non-zero coefficients are the 5.sup.th and 7.sup.th, which are suppressed −14 dB and −16.9 dB, the 11.sup.th and 13.sup.th which are suppressed −20.8 dB and −22.3 dB, and the 17.sup.th and 19.sup.th which are suppressed −22.9 and −25.5 dB with respect to the desired n=1 component. While a mathematically ideal waveform has infinite third harmonic suppression, a practical implementation will have less than infinite harmonic cancellation due to non-equal 0-1 and 1-0 logic propagation delays and from other small waveform asymmetries. Even so, the waveform of
[0035] The low third harmonic generation circuit shown in
[0036] As shown in
[0037] On the vehicle side of the forward link, a variable gain controlled amplifier 52 increases received signal amplitude from loop antenna 80. Since the received signal has non-zero values even for logic zero bits, the 13.56 MHz carrier is always present (see
[0038] The forward path carrier recovered by the limiting amplifier 54 is applied to a frequency tripler 42 implemented as a pulse generator followed by a filter or equivalently by a phase locked loop after first having passed through a crystal filter 44 that prohibits frequency multiplier operation except in the presence of a sufficiently strong forward link signal, thus avoiding conflicting frequencies. The resulting 40.680 MHz carrier is applied to a second amplitude shift modulator 62 using 100% and 50% modulations levels as before to encode serial, digital data on the return data path. The return path amplitude shift modulator 62 drives a small, resonant loop antenna 80′ as before except that harmonic emission cancellation elements 102-112 of
[0039] On the ground side of the return link, there is a small resonant loop receiving antenna 70′ and an amplifier 32 controlled by AGC circuit 34. Amplifier 32 and mixers 17 and 38 together with frequency tripler 14 form synchronous detector 30. Synchronous detection of the received return path signal is implemented by generating a 40.680 MHz synchronous detection reference signal by means of frequency tripling. While the frequency error of the synchronous detection reference signal is guaranteed to be zero by the overall design of the apparatus, zero phase error is not assured and is obtained through the use of quadrature channel phase detection and phase lock loop control of a phase shifter stage. Putting the phase shift stage (phase shifter 12) before rather than after frequency tripler 14 means total phase shift control range need only exceed 120 degrees rather than the full 360 degrees required at the synchronous detector 30 to insure phase synchronous detection. To ease the quadrature reference signal generation at 40.680 MHz, the ground side 13.560 MHz signal from the crystal oscillator 90 is multiplied by frequency tripler 14 which outputs two square waves offset by 90°. The frequency tripler 14 is implemented by a factor of six phase locked loop frequency multiplier followed by a quadrature divide-by-two circuit as shown in
[0040] The variable phase shift circuit 12 is implemented as a series of capacitively loaded, logic inverters with variable supply voltage. The capacitive loading increases the propagation delay from inverter input to inverter output. Increased supply voltage decreases inverter propagation delay, thereby reducing inverter phase shift. A conventional phase locked loop comprised by the Q channel mixer 17 and associated loop filter 16 drives Q channel output of the synchronous detector 30 to zero thereby insuring proper phase synchronization for the I channel amplitude detection.
[0041] The I channel mixer 38 of the synchronous detector 30 mixes the output of amplifier 32 with the I channel output of frequency tripler 14, thereby providing the amplitude input signal for the level detection circuit 36. Return path, level detection circuit 36 is identical to the forward path, level detection circuit 59 with the exception that the former includes the carrier detection function and associated voltage comparator 138 (
[0042]
[0043] Alternatively, return link synchronous detection can be made by making use of a coherent, but not phase synchronized, I and Q detection channels. Amplitude and phase modulation can be extracted in the conventional fashion where amplitude is the root mean square of the I and Q channels and the phase angle is the arctangent of the ratio of I and Q. In this alternative embodiment, the phase shifting and phase control loop circuitry is not needed.
[0044]
[0045] For reasons of simplicity and cost reduction it is desirable that the forward and reverse paths share a common antenna structure. The problem then is the combination and subsequent separation of the forward path and the reverse path signal from each other and from other electrical signals encountered by combining functionality into a single antenna structure. In general, there are two general methods to implement signal combination, separation and routing. The first method uses hybrid transformers, hybrid couplers, or directional couplers which distinguish between forward and reverse path signals by means of signal flow direction. The second method relies upon frequency selective filters that distinguish between signals on the basis of frequency. A frequency selective multiplexer can be implemented with LC lumped components, with distributed components or as a monolithic circuit containing a plurality of resonant elements and coupling elements. A frequency multiplexing functional block may combine both signal direction and signal frequency discrimination.
[0046] The performance of a signal multiplexer functional block (circuit) can be enhanced by the addition of electronic signal cancellation as shown in
[0047] As illustrated in
[0048] In operation, as a vehicle approaches a wireless charging station, communications is established before charging commences. Once charging commences, the full-duplex communications is used to mediate and to control multiple aspects of the wireless power transfer operation including transferred power level, output voltage and current, as well as monitoring of proper system operation. To establish control communications, the ground equipment can continuously or periodically emit a forward path signal while listening for a vehicle generated return path signal. Duplex communication is initiated upon detection of a vehicle generated return path signal. Alternatively, the vehicle side electronics can make initial contact with a return path signal temporarily derived from a temporary crystal oscillator (not shown) instead of the normally used carrier recovered by the homodyne detector 50, and non-coherently detected by the ground side electronics. Upon ground side reception of the vehicle signal, the ground side equipment emits a forward path signal. In the case of vehicle side communication initiation, the vehicle side apparatus disables the temporary crystal oscillator and reverts to coherent transponder operation upon successful homodyne detection and carrier recovery.
[0049] Both initiation methods described above rely upon the emission of a forward or a return path signal. Communications can also be advantageously initiated with no forward or reverse path emissions. In an exemplary embodiment, the ground equipment detects the change caused by an overhead vehicle in the impedance of the wireless power transfer coil and responds by emitting a forward path signal. This embodiment reduces or eliminates unnecessary signal emissions and is advantageous in some regulatory environments. In addition to the wireless power transfer coils, the initiating impedance change can also be detected in the coil alignment auxiliary coils or in the near field communications antenna. In addition to impedance change, changes in mutual impedance between isolated electromagnetic elements can also be used to initiate communications.
[0050] In the exemplary embodiment described herein, the reverse signal at 40.680 MHz is a simple integer multiple of the forward signal frequency at 13.560 MHz with both signals falling within existing, internationally designated ISM—Industrial, Scientific Medical—frequency assignments. Other frequencies and frequency pairs with non-integer frequency ratios can be used as well. For example, the two international ISM frequency bands with center frequencies of 2450 MHz and 5800 MHz may also be used. The coherent transponder architecture described herein combined with conventional phase locked loop techniques can generate a 5800 MHz signal that is frequency synchronized with a 2450 MHz signal with a frequency ratio M/N of 116/49, where M=5800 MHz and N=2450 MHz. Other combinations of ISM bands and non-ISM band frequencies, frequency pairs with other integer or rational fraction frequency and multiple simultaneous transmission and reception carrier frequencies are also possible. For example, multiple return path data channels, each return path data channel transmitting data at a different M/N multiple of the transmission frequency of the first inductive link, where M and N are integers, may also be used. Full duplex, frequency coherent communications is also possible with the ground and the remote apparatus linked by far field as opposed to near field propagation.
Dynamic Charging
[0051] Dynamic electric vehicle charging is a specialized case of providing electrical energy to an electrically powered vehicle while the vehicle is in motion. As illustrated in
[0052] The most acute problem for dynamic charging is the need for vehicle-to-ground and ground-to-vehicle communications, where discrete, high speed, highly discriminatory and reliable data must be transferred as a requirement for commanding and controlling the charging system. This data is required to operate the charging system in the case of one or several vehicles that may traverse a serial array of ground-embedded inductive power transmitters.
[0053] As shown in
[0054] In every instance of inductive power transmission, whether in the dynamic charging mode described here, or in the simpler case of stationary charging described above where a vehicle that is equipped with a single power receiver is parked and remains immobile above a single power transmitter that is embedded in the pavement, communication between the vehicle-based receiver and the ground-based transmitter must occur. This is desirable for vehicle identification, billing for energy purchases, regulating current and voltage, resonant frequency, vertical gap separation distance, primary-to-secondary alignment, and for other purposes, such as safe operations and emergency power cut-off. This is also true in the case of a moving vehicle that is charging while it is in motion, except that the single transmitter built into the vehicle communicates with a plurality of independent transmitters in sequence. This moving one-to-one relationship imposes very significant communications challenges.
[0055] The method of operation for charging a moving vehicle is to have each independent transmitter 300 in the linear array energize to create a resonant magnetic field in a sequential pattern as the vehicle receiver 320 passes over each independent transmitter 300. The type of vehicle, its specific charging requirements, its velocity, alignment with respect to the transmitter 300, and its predicted trajectory are all important factors that make this problem difficult to solve.
[0056] As depicted in
[0057] The first requirement is to have a highly proximal send-receive capability that is limited to less than 2 meters. (A vehicle moving at 60 MPH travels 88 feet per second. The time of exposure of the receiver to the transmitter may be on the order of 0.02 seconds. In this timeframe, a time delay in the signal transmission typical of digital communications systems of 0.04 to 0.07 seconds is clearly untenable).
[0058] The second requirement is to have no or very low time delay (or latency) in the signal. This is required because the vehicles 310, 312 may be moving at high rates of speed over the plurality of transmitters 300, and discrete communications between the onboard receiver 320 and any one transmitter 300 should be assured.
[0059] The third requirement is for the communications system to be able to “hand-off” or sequence the communications to the sequenced array of transmitters 300. This can be done by wiring the transmitters 300 to each other, or by allowing one transmitter 300 to communicate using the present invention near field communication system to address the adjacent transmitter 300 in the sequenced array.
[0060] The fourth requirement is for full duplex operation, or bidirectionality, so as to assure that in the very short time span that the vehicle 310, 312 is present over the transmitter 300, data may be exchanged in both directions—from the vehicle to the ground, and from the ground to the vehicle.
[0061] The fifth requirement is to allow uninterrupted communications under all weather and environmental conditions. This is accomplished by using magnetic energy, as described herein, which allows communication through bodies of water, snow, ice, and other inclement road surface conditions.
[0062] The sixth requirement is to avoid the problem of multiple antennas that are distal to the vehicle 310, 312. Multiple distal antennas introduce significant problems due to road pavement and vehicle body interference, such as multipath signal nullification. High reliability vehicle identification with multiple antennas is difficult to secure to avoid malicious hacking or other cyber-vandalism.
[0063] Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the communication system described herein offers a uniform solution to each of these requirements.
[0064] As noted above, dynamic charging allows moving vehicles to be charged while driving as the vehicles 310, 312 pass over transmitters 300 in the roadway. Each transmitter 300 is energized in a controlled sequence as it anticipates the presence of a vehicle 310, 312 above it. Since the vehicle receiver 320 is only “present” above any one charging station for a short time, a sequencing system is needed that knows where the vehicle's receiver and the charging station's transmitter are in relation to each other in real-time. Ideally, a pre-sequence firing procedure effectively establishes a traveling wave of magnetic energy that moves at the same rate as the vehicle receiver 320. In order to do this, a communication system with minimal latency, such as that described herein, is needed. As noted above, the communication system described herein is very fast (near-zero latency) and very proximal, so that where the receiver 320 is relative to a transmitter 300 is known. Thus, to enable dynamic charging, a series of charging stations equipped with the communications system described herein is provided. During operation, each charging station and/or vehicle transmitter provides information including, for example, vehicle identification, billing for energy purchases, regulating current and voltage, resonant frequency, vertical gap separation distance, primary-to-secondary alignment, and for other purposes, such as safe operations and emergency power cut-off, location, timing, trajectory, and/or speed information regarding the vehicle 310, 312 to the next transmitter so that the next transmitter fires when the vehicle's wireless charging receiver 320 is positioned over the transmitter 300 during travel.
[0065] Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the topology and circuit implementation methodology described herein enables effective realization as a single application specific integrated circuit. Further, while the disclosure contained herein pertains to the provision of electrical power to vehicles, it should be understood that this is only one of many possible applications, and other embodiments including non-vehicular applications are possible. For example, those skilled in the art will appreciate that there are numerous applications of providing a full duplex data link in non-vehicle inductive charging applications such as portable consumer electronic device chargers, such as those (e.g., PowerMat™) used to charge toothbrushes, cellular telephones, and other devices. In addition, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the transmission bandwidth (data rate) of the communications system described herein may be increased using simultaneous amplitude and angle modulation using other complex modulation methods and by use of multiple modulated forward and reverse path carriers. Accordingly, these and other such applications are included within the scope of the following claims.