Magnetic metamaterial superlens for increased range wireless power transfer.


Autoria(s): Lipworth, G; Ensworth, J; Seetharam, K; Huang, D; Lee, JS; Schmalenberg, P; Nomura, T; Reynolds, MS; Smith, DR; Urzhumov, Y
Data(s)

10/01/2014

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24407490

srep03642

Sci Rep, 2014, 4 pp. 3642 - ?

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8312

2045-2322

Relação

Sci Rep

10.1038/srep03642

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

England

Resumo

The ability to wirelessly power electrical devices is becoming of greater urgency as a component of energy conservation and sustainability efforts. Due to health and safety concerns, most wireless power transfer (WPT) schemes utilize very low frequency, quasi-static, magnetic fields; power transfer occurs via magneto-inductive (MI) coupling between conducting loops serving as transmitter and receiver. At the "long range" regime - referring to distances larger than the diameter of the largest loop - WPT efficiency in free space falls off as (1/d)(6); power loss quickly approaches 100% and limits practical implementations of WPT to relatively tight distances between power source and device. A "superlens", however, can concentrate the magnetic near fields of a source. Here, we demonstrate the impact of a magnetic metamaterial (MM) superlens on long-range near-field WPT, quantitatively confirming in simulation and measurement at 13-16 MHz the conditions under which the superlens can enhance power transfer efficiency compared to the lens-less free-space system.

Formato

3642 - ?

Idioma(s)

ENG