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Ph.D. Dissertation Defense - Nan Xing

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TitleInductively Coupled CMOS Power Receiver for Embedded Microsensors

Committee:

Dr. Gabriel Rincon-Mora, ECE, Chair , Advisor

Dr. Deepakraj Divan, ECE

Dr. Hua Wang, ECE

Dr. Steve Kenney, ECE

Dr. Yingjie Liu, Math

Abstract:

Inductively coupled power transfer can extend the lifetime of embedded microsensors that save costs, energy, and lives. To expand the microsensors' functionality, the transferred power needs to be maximized. Plus, the power receiver needs to handle wide coupling variations in real applications. Therefore, the objective of this research is to design a power receiver that outputs the highest power for the widest coupling range. This research proposes a switched resonant half-bridge power stage that adjusts both energy transfer frequency and duration so the output power is maximally high. A maximum power point (MPP) theory is also developed to predict the optimal settings of the power stage with 98.6% accuracy. Finally, this research addresses the system integration challenges such as synchronization and over-voltage protection. The fabricated self-synchronized prototype outputs up to 89% of the available power across 0.067%~7.9% coupling range. The output power (in percentage of available power) and coupling range are 1.3× and 13× higher than the comparable state of the arts.

Status

  • Workflow Status:Published
  • Created By:Daniela Staiculescu
  • Created:03/30/2020
  • Modified By:Daniela Staiculescu
  • Modified:04/01/2020

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