NEAR-FIELD COMMUNICATION (NFC) TAGS OPTIMIZED FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE NFC AND WIRELESS POWER RECEPTION WITH SMALL ANTENNAS
20170288735 · 2017-10-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G06K19/0723
PHYSICS
H01Q1/2225
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A device for near-field communication (NFC) and wireless power reception (WPR) using a magnetic field. The device has an antenna resonant circuit. The antenna resonant circuit includes an antenna for magnetic flux of the magnetic field to flow therethrough, to thereby receive a NFC signal during the NFC and receive wireless power during the WPR, and a multi-Q antenna matching circuit configured to adjust an impedance of the antenna to thereby adjust a quality factor (Q-factor) of the antenna resonant circuit. The multi-Q antenna matching circuit is configured to switch between a high-Q mode for the WPR and a low-Q mode for the NFC, based on whether strength of the magnetic field is larger than a predetermined threshold. The device may also include two separate antenna resonant circuits, of which the Q-factors are respectively no higher than 25 and no lower than 50.
Claims
1. A device for near-field communication (NFC) and wireless power reception (WPR) using a magnetic field, comprising: an antenna resonant circuit that includes an antenna for magnetic flux of the magnetic field to flow therethrough, to thereby receive a NFC signal during the NFC and receive wireless power during the WPR, and a multi-Q antenna matching circuit configured to adjust an impedance of the antenna to thereby adjust a quality factor (Q-factor) of the antenna resonant circuit, the multi-Q antenna matching circuit being configured to switch between a high-Q mode for the WPR and a low-Q mode for the NFC, based on whether strength of the magnetic field is larger than a predetermined threshold.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the high-Q mode is a mode in which the Q-factor of the antenna resonant circuit is no lower than 50, and the low-Q mode is a mode in which the Q-factor of the antenna resonant circuit is no higher than 25.
3. The device of claim 1, further comprising: a demodulator configured to demodulate the NFC signal received by the antenna during the NFC; a data interface configured to transmit the demodulated NFC signal to a first external device; a rectifier-and-regulator configured to convert the wireless power received by the antenna during the WPR to regulated DC (direct current) energy; and an energy harvest interface configured to supply the regulated DC energy to a second external device.
4. The device of claim 3, wherein the antenna is further configured to transmit another NFC signal, and has a load connected thereto; the device further comprises a load modulator configured to modulate an impedance of the load for transmitting the another NFC signal; and the data interface is further configured to receive data corresponding to the another NFC signal from the first external device, and to send the received data to the load modulator.
5. The device of claim 3, wherein the load modulator includes a radio frequency (RF) switch that has an isolation value larger than 10 KOhm, an on-resistance value smaller than 50 Ohm, and a switching speed larger than 1 MHz.
6. The device of claim 3, wherein the rectifier-and-regulator includes a switch for controlling a connection from the rectifier-and-regulator to the energy harvest interface.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein the multi-Q antenna matching circuit includes an antenna matching circuit and a Q-factor adjustment circuit.
8. The device of claim 7, wherein the Q-factor adjustment circuit is connected in parallel to the antenna, and includes a Q-factor tuning resistor and a Q-factor tuning switch connected in series.
9. The device of claim 7, wherein the antenna matching circuit utilizes an impedance transformation topology, and has an insertion loss smaller than ldb.
10. The device of claim 1, wherein the antenna has an inductance in a range of 1 uH to 10 uH, an area in a range of 100 mm.sup.2 to 5000 mm.sup.2, and a Q value higher than 50.
11. The device of claim 1, wherein the high-Q mode and the low-Q mode are switched in real-time.
12. A device for concurrent near-field communication (NFC) and wireless power reception (WPR) using a magnetic field, comprising: a low-Q antenna resonant circuit configured to perform the NFC, and including a first antenna for magnetic flux of the magnetic field to flow therethrough, to thereby receive a NFC signal for the NFC, and a first antenna matching circuit that is connected to the first antenna and is so configured that a quality factor (Q-factor) of the low-Q antenna resonant circuit is no higher than 25; and a high-Q antenna resonant circuit configured to perform the WPR, and including a second antenna for the magnetic flux of the magnetic field to flow therethrough, to thereby receive wireless power for the WPR, and a second antenna matching circuit that is connected to the second antenna and is so configured that the Q-factor of the high-Q antenna resonant circuit is no lower than 50, wherein the low-Q and high-Q antenna resonant circuits are separate from each other.
13. The device of claim 12, wherein the low-Q and high-Q antenna resonant circuits are configured to operate simultaneously.
14. The device of claim 12, further comprising: a demodulator connected to the first antenna matching circuit and configured to demodulate the NFC signal received by the first antenna; a data interface configured to transmit the demodulated NFC signal to a first external device; a rectifier-and-regulator connected to the second antenna matching circuit and configured to convert the wireless power received by the second antenna to regulated DC (direct current) energy; and an energy harvest interface configured to supply the regulated DC energy to a second external device.
15. The device of claim 14, wherein the second antenna is further configured to transmit another NFC signal, and has a load connected thereto; the device further comprises a load modulator configured to modulate an impedance of the load for transmitting the another NFC signal; and the data interface is further configured to receive data corresponding to the another NFC signal from the first external device, and to send the received data to the load modulator.
16. The device of claim 15, wherein the load modulator includes a radio frequency (RF) switch that has an isolation value larger than 10 KOhm, an on-resistance value smaller than 50 Ohm, and a switching speed larger than 1 MHz.
17. The device of claim 14, wherein the rectifier-and-regulator includes a switch for controlling a connection from the rectifier-and-regulator to the energy harvest interface.
18. The device of claim 12, wherein each of the first and second antenna matching circuits utilizes an impedance transformation topology, and has an insertion loss smaller than ldb.
19. The device of claim 12, wherein the first antenna has at least one of an inductance value smaller than 4 uH, a Q value smaller than 50, and a coupling coefficient, with respect to an external antenna coupled thereto, is smaller than 0.1.
20. The device of claim 12, wherein the second antenna has an inductance in a range of 1 uH to 10 uH, an area in a range of 100 mm.sup.2 to 5000 mm.sup.2, and a Q value higher than 50.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONS OF THE INVENTION
[0034] The present invention relates to an NFC reader interface and a passive NFC tag interface, which are specially optimized for working with small antennas and NFC energy harvesting. The disclosed NFC reader and passive tag interfaces are fully compatible with current NFC standards, therefore they can work with any other NFC device.
[0035] Analysis of NFC Energy Harvesting Efficiency
[0036] NFC energy harvesting is a special case of inductive coupling wireless power transfer. For any inductive coupling wireless power transfer system, the maximum energy transfer efficiency η.sub.max can be expressed as:
where k is the coupling coefficient between the antennas of NFC reader and tag, Q.sub.1 and Q.sub.2 are the Q-factors of the reader's and the tag's antenna resonant circuits when oscillating at 13.56 MHz, respectively. Note that η.sub.max is the maximum efficiency a wireless power transfer system could reach. The actual efficiency also depends on system source-load impedance match.
[0037] The coupling coefficient reflects the degree of coupling between two antennas. It can be viewed as the percentage of magnetic flux generated by one antenna that passes through another antenna. Generally, the further apart are the antennas, the lower is the coupling coefficient, as shown in
[0038] Q-factor describes the frequency-selectivity and efficiency of a circuit at a given frequency, which could be calculated as:
where X and R are the reactance and the resistance of the circuit, respectively. The higher the Q is, the more selective and higher efficient the circuit becomes, and vice versa. In the case of the antenna resonant circuit, the higher is the Q, the lower is the loss when oscillating.
[0039] The above analysis indicates four factors that collaboratively determine the wireless power transfer efficiency, which are the coupling coefficient, the Q-factor of the antenna resonant circuit of the reader Q.sub.1, the Q-factor of the antenna resonant circuit of the tag Q.sub.2, and the degree of impedance matching at the tag's end. Specifically,
[0040] Coupling coefficient k: From Equation (1) and (2), tighter coupling between antennas leads to higher wireless power transfer efficiency. The coupling coefficient is determined by the relative position, and the size difference of the two antennas. It usually cannot be directly controlled by system designers, since it is much related to the nature of applications and the industrial design of the final product.
[0041] Q-factor of the antenna resonant circuit of the reader Q.sub.1: According to the above analysis, higher Q.sub.1 leads to higher wireless power transfer efficiency. Note that Q.sub.1 is the Q-factor of the entire resonant circuit, which is collectively determined by the antenna Q-factor, the antenna driver ESR (Equivalent Series Resistance), and the loss of antenna matching circuit.
[0042] Q-factor of the antenna resonant circuit of the tag Q.sub.2: According to the above analysis, higher Q.sub.2 leads to higher wireless power transfer efficiency. Note that Q.sub.2 is the Q-factor of the entire resonant circuit, which is collectively determined by the antenna Q-factor, and the loss of antenna matching circuit.
[0043] Impedance matching of NFC tag: k and Q determines the maximum wireless power transfer efficiency a system can reach, but the actual efficiency is also determined by the degree of matching of the load impedance at tag to the source when seeing into the antenna matching circuit. Precise impedance matching is usually difficult on most systems due to load impedance variations.
[0044] Analysis of Load Modulation when Using Small Antennas
[0045] For the majority of NFC systems, the bottleneck of NFC performance is the performance of the Tag->Reader communication link.
[0046] Apparently, greater variations of reflective resistor 510 during load modulation will lead to stronger current change on the antenna of the NFC reader interface, which creates higher signal strength. The resistance of reflective resistor 510, when the antennas are resonant, can be expressed as:
where ω is the signal frequency, M is the mutual inductance of the two antennas, R.sub.2 and R.sub.L are the resistance of and the load to the tag's antenna resonant circuit, respectively. Because ω, M, and R.sub.2 are constant during communication, the variation of Z.sub.r can be only generated by the change of R.sub.L. Apparently, when the resistance of R.sub.Lis switching between 0 and infinity, Z.sub.r has the highest variation. The maximum and minimum values of Z.sub.r can be expressed as:
[0047] The signal strength generated by load modulation, H, can be written as the ratio between the impedance variation caused by load modulation and the maximum impedance on the reader's antenna resonant circuit:
[0048] Where R.sub.1 is the equivalent series resistance (ESR) of the reader's antenna resonant circuit, i.e., the sum of Resistor 501 and Resistor 503, Q.sub.1 and Q.sub.2 are the Q-factors of antenna resonant circuits of the reader interface and the tag interface, respectively. The maximum and minimum signal strengths are achieved when H is equal to 1 and 0, respectively.
[0049] The dimension of antennas mainly affects the coupling coefficient k between the antennas of the reader and the tag. For a given distance between antennas, smaller antennas lead to a lower coupling coefficient. According to Equation (3), a low coupling coefficient will lower the tag->reader signal strength H, which may cause the NFC reader interface to drop the frame due to low SNR (signal-to-noise ratio).
[0050] Based on the above analysis, there are a few methods to deal with the low coupling coefficient caused by small antennas:
[0051] (1) Improving the Q-factor of the reader's antenna resonant circuit, Q.sub.1. According to Equation (3), increasing Q.sub.1 would improve the tag->reader signal strength H. Q.sub.1 is the combined Q-factor of the entire antenna resonant circuit, which is determined collaboratively by the Q-factor of the antenna, the ESR of matching circuit and the antenna driver, and etc.
[0052] (2) Improving the Q-factor of the tag's antenna resonant circuit, Q.sub.2. According to Equation (3), increasing Q.sub.2 would improve the tag->reader signal strength H. Q.sub.2 is the combined Q-factor of the entire antenna resonant circuit, which is determined collaboratively by the Q-factor of the antenna, the ESR of matching circuit, and etc.
[0053] (3) Adjusting the resistance switching range of load R.sub.L. According to Equation (3), increasing the range that R.sub.L could switch would improve the tag->reader signal strength H. In most cases, the maximum and minimum values of R.sub.L are determined by the characteristics of the load switch in the load modulator. To improve H, the load switch has a small input capacitance, high isolation, and a low insertion loss.
[0054] From the above analysis, the common solution for improving wireless power transfer efficiency and communication performance when using small antennas, is to improve the Q-factors of both reader and tag interfaces. However, for communication, having high Q-factor will also decrease available communication bandwidth, lowering communication data rate.
[0055] The present invention discloses a method for using multiple antenna resonant circuits with different Qs to satisfy the contradicting requirements. The invention uses low Q antenna resonant circuits for the reader->tag link communication, and uses high Q antenna resonant circuits for the tag->reader link communication and wireless power transfer. Because a reader usually has much higher processing power than a tag due to its abundant energy, the NFC reader can perform sophisticated signal processing on a received signal to mitigate the distortion caused by the low bandwidth.
[0056] NFC Reader in One Embodiment of the Invention
[0057]
[0058] Different from a conventional NFC reader design, the disclosed NFC reader design has an antenna resonant circuit with two working modes, i.e., the high-Q mode and the low-Q mode. When working in the high-Q mode, the antenna resonant circuit has a high Q-factor but a low bandwidth. The 13.56 MHz carrier signal could be emitted at a very low loss, which is well suited for wireless power transfer. When working in the low-Q mode, the antenna resonant circuit has a low Q-factor but a high bandwidth, which is especially suitable for NFC signal transmission. These two modes could be switched in real time by the MCU. The NFC reader design is completely compatible with current NFC standards.
[0059]
[0060] Antenna 705, which is Antenna 601 shown in
[0061] The disclosed NFC reader design adjusts its working mode in real time in accordance to its current state. It spends most of the time in the high-Q mode for supporting high-efficient wireless power transfer.
First Embodiment of NFC Tag
[0062]
[0063] Unlike a conventional NFC tag design, the disclosed NFC tag design has a bi-Q antenna resonant circuit, which can work in the high-Q mode and the low-Q mode. When working in the high-Q mode, the antenna resonant circuit has a high Q-factor but a low bandwidth. The 13.56 MHz carrier signal could be received at a very low loss, which is well suited for wireless power reception (a.k.a., energy harvesting). When working in the low-Q mode, the antenna resonant circuit has low a Q-factor but a high bandwidth, which is especially suitable for NFC signal reception. These two modes could be switched in real time. The disclosed NFC tag design is completely compatible with current NFC standard.
[0064]
[0065] Antenna 1005 is designed to reach optimum wireless power reception efficiency and communication performance. First, Antenna 1005 resonates at around 13.56 MHz. Due to the limitation of practical tuning capacitors, the existence of parasitic capacitance, and the mutual inductance caused by tag antenna, the inductance of Antenna 1005 cannot be too large. On the other hand, too small inductance leads to a low Q and low efficiency. Therefore, the optimal inductance value is within 1 uH to 10 uH. Second, Antenna 1005 has a sufficiently high Q. This could be achieved by using wider and thicker antenna tracks, low impedance antenna wires, and low RF loss base materials. Third, Antenna 1005 has a size that is proper for providing sufficient coupling. For typical applications, an area in the range of 100 mm.sup.2 to 5000 mm.sup.2 would be sufficient. A smaller Antenna is still able to communicate, but with lower performance (shorter distance, lower data rate, etc.).
[0066] Load modulator maximizes the switching range of load impedance to improve the communication performance of the tag->reader link, which could be achieved with a high isolation and a low on-resistance of RF Switch 1002. Typically an isolation value higher than 10 KOhm, and an on-resistance lower than 50 Ohm should be sufficient. RF Switch 1002 also has a sufficiently high power rating to handle the high power dissipation when switched. If the power rating is too low, Resistor 1003 is used for limiting the power dissipated on RF Switch 1002, however, at the expense of lowering the switching range. Due to the high frequency of the NFC subcarrier signal (848 KHz) that is to be transmitted, RF Switch 1002 has a switching speed higher than 1 MHz.
[0067] The disclosed NFC tag design adjusts its working mode in real time in accordance to its current state. It spends most of the time in the high-Q mode for supporting high-efficient wireless power reception.
[0068] A.sub.t is set according to the actual field strength when the NFC tag is close to the NFC reader. It has hysteresis, i.e., its value when a load is connected is lower than that when the load is unconnected. This prevents oscillating. The hysteresis value is determined according to the intended system load.
[0069] Because the modulation detection may be performed in the high-Q mode and the actual signal reception is performed in the low-Q mode, if the data rate is high, several modulation symbols may be missed during mode transition. Therefore, this disclosed NFC tag design can only support NFC protocols with a lower data rate.
[0070] Sometimes NFC tag interfaces are battery powered (active tags), and do not need wireless power reception function. The state machine transition of these tag interfaces is shown in
Second Embodiment of NFC Tag
[0071]
[0072] Unlike the conventional NFC tag design, the disclosed NFC tag design has two antenna resonant circuits that have a high Q and a low Q, respectively. With the low Q, the first antenna resonant circuit provides a high NFC reception bandwidth. With the high Q, the second antenna resonant circuit provides exceptional wireless power reception efficiency. The two antenna resonant circuits work together, which offers both high communication and wireless power reception performance. This disclosed NFC tag design can support all standard data rates, and is completely compatible with current NFC standards.
[0073]
[0074] As only the second antenna resonant circuit can harvest the energy (the energy received by the first antenna resonant circuit is converted to heat), to improve wireless power reception efficiency, the energy that is received by the first antenna resonant circuit is sufficiently low. To be specific, the received signal strength is as low as possible, but higher than the reception sensitivity of the demodulator. There are a few methods to lower the reception voltage. First, lowering the Q of the first antenna resonant circuit at 13.56 MHz. This makes the circuit less sensitive to a 13.56 MHz signal. It could be done by increasing the value of Resistor 1309, or tuning the resonant frequency away from 13.56 MHz by carefully choosing the value of Capacitor 1311. Second, decreasing the inductance of the antenna. This reduces the mutual inductance between antennas of the reader and the first antenna resonant circuit, which decreases induced voltage. It could be achieved by using antennas with less loops or a smaller encompassed area. Third, decreasing the coupling between the antennas of the reader and the first antenna resonant circuit. This could be done by decreasing the area of the antenna, or moving the antenna away.
[0075] Load modulator maximizes the switching range of load impedance to improve the communication performance of the tag->reader link, which could be achieved with a high isolation and a low on-resistance of RF Switch 1302. Typically an isolation value higher than 10 KOhm, and an on-resistance lower than 50 Ohm should be sufficient. RF Switch 1302 also has sufficiently high power rating to handle the high power dissipation when switched. If the power rating is too low, Resistor 1303 is used for limiting the power dissipated on RF Switch 1302, however, at the expense of lowering the switching range. Due to the high frequency of the NFC subcarrier signal (848 KHz) that is to be transmitted, RF Switch 1302 has a switching speed higher than 1 MHz.
[0076] The second antenna resonant circuit is designed to reach optimum wireless power transfer efficiency and communication performance. First, the second antenna resonant circuit resonates at around 13.56 MHz. Due to the limitation of practical tuning capacitors, the existence of parasitic capacitance, and the mutual inductance caused by tag antenna, the inductance of Antenna 1306 cannot be too large. On the other hand, too small inductance leads to a low Q and low efficiency. Therefore, the optimal inductance value is within 1 uH to 10 uH. Second, the second antenna resonant circuit has a sufficiently high Q. This means high Q for Antenna 1306 and low loss for Antenna Matching Circuit 1304. High antenna Q could be achieved by using wider and thicker antenna tracks, low impedance antenna wires, and low RF loss base materials. Low matching circuit loss could be achieved by using simple matching topology, as more components mean more loss. Third, Antenna 1306 has a size that is proper for providing sufficient coupling. For typical applications, an area that is in the range of 100 mm.sup.2 and 5000 mm.sup.2 would be sufficient. Fourth, the output impedance of the second antenna matching circuit matches that of the load. This could be done by adjusting the impedance transformation of Antenna Matching Circuit 1304.
[0077]