Title :
On the Efficiency of Far-Field Wireless Power Transfer
Author :
Minghua Xia ; Aissa, Sonia
Author_Institution :
Inst. Nat. de la Rech. Sci. (INRS), Univ. of Quebec, Montreal, QC, Canada
Abstract :
Far-field wireless power transfer (WPT) is a promising technique to resolve the painstaking power-charging problem inherent in various wireless terminals. This paper investigates the power transfer efficiency of the WPT segment in future communication systems in support of simultaneous power and data transfer, by means of analytically computing the time-average output direct current (DC) power at user equipments (UEs). In order to investigate the effect of channel variety among UEs on the average output DC power, different policies for the scheduling of the power transfer among the users are implemented and compared in two scenarios: homogeneous, whereby users are symmetric and experience similar path loss, and heterogeneous, whereby users are asymmetric and exhibit different path losses. Specifically, if opportunistic scheduling is performed among N symmetric/asymmetric UEs, the power scaling laws are attained by using extreme value theory and reveal that the gain in power transfer efficiency is lnN if UEs are symmetric whereas the gain is N if UEs are asymmetric, compared with that of conventional round-robin scheduling. Thus, the channel variety among UEs inherent to the wireless environment can be exploited by opportunistic scheduling to significantly improve the power transfer efficiency when designing future wireless communication systems in support of simultaneous power and data transfer.
Keywords :
inductive power transmission; radiofrequency power transmission; scheduling; DC power; UEs; WPT; data transfer; extreme value theory; far-field wireless power transfer efficiency; opportunistic scheduling; painstaking power-charging problem; path loss; power scaling laws; round-robin scheduling; time-average output direct current power; user equipments; wireless communication systems; wireless terminals; Arrays; Batteries; Data transfer; Radio frequency; Receiving antennas; Wireless communication; Extreme value theory; finite spatial coverage; multi-user scheduling; power transfer efficiency; simultaneous power and data receiver; wireless power transfer (WPT);
Journal_Title :
Signal Processing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSP.2015.2417497