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PIERS Proceedings, Moscow, Russia, August 19–23, 2012 684 Resonant Frequency Splitting Analysis and Optimation of Wireless Power Transfer System X. L. Huang, L. L. Tan, W. Wang, Y. L. Zhou, and H. Qiang School of Electrical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing 210096, China Abstract— Frequency optimal control for magnetic resonance coupled wireless power transfer system to improve the system transfer efficiency, which requires the system should have one unique stable resonant frequency. Actually, transmitted at close distance the system will appear multiple resonant frequencies (frequency splitting) phenomenon which results in unstable and increase control complexity. In order to study the frequency splitting mechanism, the system equivalent load model is established on the base of bilateral capacitor parallel-compensated topology in this paper. And then the transfer distance and load resistance threshold conditions are presented when the resonant frequency splitting occurred. On this basis, frequency optimal control method and solutions for system frequency splitting is proposed. Finally, simulations and experiments verify the feasibility of the analysis. 1. INTRODUCTION With the rapid social development and people’s pursuit of amenities, the traditional wired power supply cannot meet the requirements. In order to get rid of the power wired problems to achieve wireless power transmission, mountains of work have been done on this topic and lots of methods have been proposed by scientists [1–4]. The most noteworthy is MIT’s use of magnetic resonance coupled theory to achieve power wireless transfer in 2007 [5], which successfully avoids obstacles to transfer power in meter-scale range, and indicates a new research direction for medium-range (meter level) wireless power transmission. This technology quickly becomes a hot pursuit for research institutions [6–10]. Currently, studies reveal that while at long-distance transmission, the wireless power transfer system has only one stable resonant frequency and that the transmitting and receiving coils circuits should be in their self-resonance respectively under this frequency to achieve efficient performance. But, at close transfer distance, the system resonant frequency will give rise to two or three resonant frequencies which increase the power transfer instability and difficult to determine the ideal frequency controlling points. It can be seen that the uniqueness and variation characteristics of the system resonant frequency are core of system optimal control, and also one of the main research contents in this paper. In order to achieve system resonance, varieties of capacitor compensated modes can be used in transmitting and receiving circuits. In this paper, the bilateral capacitor parallel-compensated topology is studied, and the system load equivalent model is established to analyze the variation characteristics of the system input impedance. In conclusion, an optimization control method is proposed to ensure the system a single stable resonant frequency and effective work in resonant status. 2. TRANSMISSION MODEL AND PP TOPOLOGY Theory suggests that the wireless power transfer system is composed of high-frequency power Us , receiving and transmitting coils L1 and L2 , capacitor C1 , and C2 , and the load RL . Only in terms of transfer system, the specific circuit of the system is shown in Fig. 1. R1 , R2 are coils equivalent resistance [5] respectively, M , d for mutual inductance and the distance (transfer distance) between two coils, respectively. And the high frequency influence is ignored for simplification. 3. EQUIVALENT LOAD MODEL Suppose that ω0 is the self-resonant frequency of receiving coil circuit, Q2 is quality factor, L1 = L2 , C1 = αC2 , ω = βω0 , where α for capacitance ratio, β for operating frequency ratio. Then the relations are as follows: √ ω0 = 1/ L2 C2 Q2 = RL /(ω0 L2 ) (1) κ = M/√L L = M/L 2 1 2 Progress In Electromagnetics Research Symposium Proceedings, Moscow, Russia, August 19–23, 2012 685 Figure 1: System PP compensated mode. Figure 2: The normalized equivalent circuit. Here k is coupling coefficient between two coils, and the receiving coil circuit self-impedance is converted to the transmitting circuit (as shown in Fig. 2), the normalized receiving equivalent impedance Zr in transmitting circuit is £ ¤ β 2 k 2 RL2 Q2 (1 + β 2 Q22 ) R2 (1 + β 2 Q22 ) + RL £ ¤ Zr = Q2 (R2 Q2 (1 + β 2 Q22 ) + RL Q2 )2 + (βRL (1 + β 2 Q22 ) − βQ22 RL )2 −j β 3 k 2 RL3 (1 + β 2 Q22 )(1 + β 2 Q22 − Q22 ) £ ¤ Q2 (R2 Q2 (1 + β 2 Q22 ) + RL Q2 )2 + (βRL (1 + β 2 Q22 ) − βQ22 RL )2 (2) If Zr is defined as a form of Zr = Rr − jXr , then the system input admittance Yin watched from the transmitting side is µ ¶ Q22 (R1 + Rr ) Q2 (βRL − Xr Q2 ) αβQ2 Yin = 2 − 2 +j (3) RL Q2 (R1 + Rr )2 + (βRL − Xr Q2 )2 Q2 (R1 + Rr )2 + (βRL − Xr Q2 )2 The imaginary part of Yin should be zero while the system is working efficiently in resonant state, and under Us , the system input power P and transfer efficiency η can be obtained by Equation (4) P = (ReYin )Us2 (4) 4. FREQUENCY ANALYSIS AND SPLITTING PHENOMENON For the above analysis it can be concluded that the system input impedance imaginary part ImYin is zero when the system works in resonant, so the study of resonant frequency points can be converted to the study of the frequency solutions of the equation ImYin = 0. Since mutual inductance’s calculation is quite complex, we have M ≈ πµ0 r4 N2 /(d2 +r2 )1.5 [11], in which µ0 is the permeability, N is turns of coils, r is the radius. 4.1. Resonant Frequency Splitting The stability of the system is one of the key performances, which requires a single stable resonance frequency. The resonant frequency is the frequency solutions which ensure zero of the system’s input impedance imaginary part ImYin . With a fixed RL , there exists a minimum threshold distance when frequency splitting occurs, denoted as dc . When the transfer distance is greater than dc , the system will only have one stable resonant point. In order to solve the dc , the threshold value of coupling coefficient kc should be given when system frequency splitting occurs. Regardless of R1 , R2 , we propose the constraint relationship between coupling coefficient k, load resistance RL , capacitance ratio α and the operating frequency ratio β as ImYin = F (k, RL , α, β) = 0 while frequency splitting occurs. Substituting the relevant parameters, which can be further organized into a fourth-order equation on k, that F (k, RL , α, β) = ak4 + bk2 + c. Here, a, b, c, are the function on the load RL , capacitance ratio α, operating frequency ratio β, which be expressed as ¡ ¢ h ¡ ¢ i 2 Q2 2 αβ 5 Q3 R2 + αβ 7 Q R2 1 + β 2 Q2 − Q2 2 a = 1 + β 2 L 2 2 L 2 2 ¯ ¡ 3 ¢ ¡ ¢ ¯ ¯ β Q2 R2 − 2αβ 5 Q2 R2 (1 + β 2 Q2 ) 1 + β 2 Q2 − Q2 ¯ 2 2 2 ¯ L L ¯ h i ¡ ¢2 b=¯ ¯ (5) ¯ ¯ Q22 + β 2 1 + β 2 Q22 − Q22 h ¡ ¢ i2 ¡ 3 ¢ 2 − βQ R2 c = Q2 + β 2 1 + β 2 Q2 − Q2 2 αβ Q2 RL 2 L 2 2 2 PIERS Proceedings, Moscow, Russia, August 19–23, 2012 686 Then, the boundary condition of equation F (k, RL , α, β) = 0 has only one positive solution besides zero is β = (1/α)0.5 , and the threshold value kc is s √ −b − b2 − 4ac κc = (6) 2a Especially when α = β = 1, kc is (−b/a)0.5 = [1/(1 + Q22 )]0.5 . By Equation (3), we can see that if k ¿ 1, ImYin is approximately proportional to β, and the frequency splitting disappears. Then ImYin can be simplified as Q2 (β 2 α − 1)/RLβ . If α is not equal to 1, according to ImYin = 0 we can obtain the similar relationship between β and α: β = (1/α)0.5 , which suggests that the system resonant frequency is determined uniquely by α. 4.2. The Impact of Load Changes on Resonance Frequency If we investigate on ImYin changed with β under different quality factor while α = 1, the results are shown as Fig. 3. With RL changed from large to small at close distance, the system resonant frequencies change from multiple into single. Evidently, if d is fixed, there exists a threshold load which makes the system produce only one resonant frequency, denoted as RLc . As the distance increases, the coupling relation between two coils will be reduced, which leads to the decreased impact of load on system resonant frequency, as is shown in Fig. 3(b) and Fig. 3(c). By comparing research we find that no matter how the load changes, the system has a common resonant frequency if distance d and capacitance ratio α are fixed, which gradually approaches ω0 with the coupling between two coils weaken. At short distance, the system resonant frequency will deviate from ω0 and the frequency splitting phenomenon may occur. 5. DESIGN AND FREQUENCY OPTIMIZATION Based on the above analysis it can be found that at close distance, a single stable resonant frequency of the transfer system for an easy control can be achieved as following: fixing α, and adjusting RL to achieve only one resonant frequency at the whole distance under the context of d < dc . For the actual system parameters simulation studying, Lp = Ls = 8.02 µH, N = 3, r = 0.3 m, C2 = 265 pF. Simulation and experimental studies are carried out to verify the above theoretical analysis. When α = 1, the curve of β varied with d is shown as Fig. 4. It can be easily seen if d is greater than dc (threshold distance), the resonant frequency is almost close to ω0 , otherwise deviates from ω0 obviously. If the power source frequency output ω can change around ω0 , this requires the system working resonant be near ω0 with d changing, and has only one stable resonance frequency. If RL = 1500 Ω in long-distance transmission is given, we measured dc is 0.45 m when resonance (a) α=1, d=0.2 m (b) α=1, d=0.3 m (c) α=1, d=1.0 m Figure 3: ImYin (β) at different transfer distance and load. Figure 4: The curve of β varied with d. Figure 5: The curve of RL varied with d. Progress In Electromagnetics Research Symposium Proceedings, Moscow, Russia, August 19–23, 2012 687 Figure 6: Load received power varied with d. Figure 7: Transfer efficiency varied with d. frequency splitting occurred. If the transfer distance is less than dc , we can adjust RL to make the system have a unique resonant frequency, and the actual resistance value is shown in Fig. 5. Figures 6 and 7 indicate the curves of load received power and transfer efficiency by adjusting RL to make the system work in a single stable resonance frequency near ω0 . By comparison we can see that through controlling the system has only one resonant frequency, which increase the stability of the system. Due to without frequency splitting at the long-distance the system transfer power and transfer efficiency has not been improved significantly before and after the optimization, But at close distance, the load received power and transfer efficiency are larger. 6. CONCLUSIONS This paper has an in-depth study of the load model of magnetic resonant coupled wireless transfer system with PP topology. By exploring the relations between the system’s resonant frequencies, coupling coefficient and the capacitance ratio, the variation of system resonant frequency are analyzed in detail. And then the threshold value of load and distance are investigated when system resonant frequency splitting occurs. On this basis, an optimization method is proposed to make the system work in a single stable resonant frequency by changing the load resistance and capacitance ratio at different transfer distance, thus improving the system stability and controllability. Both the simulations and experiments manifest that the system enjoys a higher transfer efficiency and power output under this optimal control method. The research of this paper will also prove a significant theoretical guidance and reference for the system stability control and optimized operation. ACKNOWLEDGMENT This work was supported by Scholarship Award for Excellent Doctoral Student granted by Ministry of Education, the Research Innovation Program for College Graduates of Jiangsu Province (No. CXZZ11 0150) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 51177011). REFERENCES 1. Nikola, T., “The transmission of electrical energy without wires as a means for furthering peace,” Electrical World and Engineer, Vol. 7, 21–24, Jan. 1905. 2. Hideyuki, K., K. Tamotsu, and S. Hideo, “Power and information transmission to implanted medical device using ultrasonic,” Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 40, No. 5B, 3865– 3866, Feb. 2001. 3. Junji, H., K. Tae-Woong, and K. Atsuo, “Integral motor with driver and wireless transmission of power and information for autonomous subspindle drive,” IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, Vol. 15, No. 1, 13–20, Jan. 2000. 4. Wang, G. X., W. T. Liu, and M. 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