DocumentCode
87861
Title
Transmission Line Resistance Compression Networks and Applications to Wireless Power Transfer
Author
Barton, Taylor W. ; Gordonson, Joshua M. ; Perreault, David J.
Author_Institution
Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume
3
Issue
1
fYear
2015
fDate
Mar-15
Firstpage
252
Lastpage
260
Abstract
Microwave-to-dc rectification is valuable in many applications, including RF energy recovery, dc-dc conversion, and wireless power transfer. In such applications, it is desired for the microwave rectifier system to provide a constant RF input impedance. Consequently, variation in rectifier input impedance over varying incident power levels can hurt system performance. To address this challenge, we introduce multiway transmission line resistance compression networks (TLRCNs) for maintaining near-constant input impedance in RF-to-dc rectifier systems. A development of TLRCNs is presented, along with their application to RF-to-dc conversion and wireless power transfer. We derive analytical expressions for the behavior of TLRCNs, and describe two design methodologies applicable to both single and multistage implementations. A 2.45-GHz four-way TLRCN network is implemented and applied to create a 4-W resistance compressed rectifier system that has narrow-range resistive input characteristics over a 10-dB power range. It is demonstrated to improve the impedance match to mostly resistive but variable input impedance class-E rectifiers over a 10-dB power range. The resulting TLRCN plus rectifier system has >50% RF-to-dc conversion efficiency over a >10-dB input power range at 2.45 GHz (peak efficiency 70%), and standing wave ratio <;1.1 over a 7.7-dB range, despite a nonnegligible reactive component in the rectifier loads.
Keywords
DC-DC power convertors; inductive power transmission; power transmission lines; rectifiers; RF-to-dc rectifier systems; TLRCN; class-E rectifiers; constant RF input impedance; dc-dc conversion; frequency 2.45 GHz; hurt system; microwave rectifier system; microwave-to-dc rectification; multiway transmission line; power 4 W; resistance compressed rectifier; resistance compression networks; wireless power transfer; Impedance; Power transmission lines; Radio frequency; Rectennas; Resistance; Wireless communication; Impedance matching; rectennas; resonant rectifiers; transmission lines; wireless power transfer;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Emerging and Selected Topics in Power Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-6777
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JESTPE.2014.2319056
Filename
6803053
Link To Document