On-Site Wireless Power Generation
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Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Abstract
Conventional wireless power transfer systems con sist of a microwave power generator and a microwave power receiver separated by some distance. To realize efficient power transfer, the system is typically brought to resonance, and the coupled-antenna mode is optimized to reduce radiation into
the surrounding space. In this scheme, any modification of the
receiver position or of its electromagnetic properties results in
the necessity of dynamically tuning the whole system to restore
the resonant matching condition. It implies poor robustness to
the receiver location and load impedance, as well as additional
energy consumption in the control network. In this study, we
introduce a new paradigm for wireless power delivery based
on which the whole system, including transmitter and receiver
and the space in between, forms a unified microwave power
generator. In our proposed scenario the load itself becomes part
of the generator. Microwave oscillations are created directly at
the receiver location, eliminating the need for dynamical tuning
of the system within the range of the self-oscillation regime.
The proposed concept has relevant connections with the recent
interest in parity-time symmetric systems, in which balanced loss
and gain distributions enable unusual electromagnetic responses.