John Wiley & Sons Wireless Power Transfer for Electric Vehicles and Mobile Devices Cover From mobile, cable-free re-charging of electric vehicles, smart phones and laptops to collecting sol.. Product #: 978-1-119-32905-3 Regular price: $114.02 $114.02 Auf Lager

Wireless Power Transfer for Electric Vehicles and Mobile Devices

Rim, Chun T. / Mi, Chris

Wiley - IEEE

Cover

1. Auflage Juli 2017
626 Seiten, Hardcover
Praktikerbuch

ISBN: 978-1-119-32905-3
John Wiley & Sons

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From mobile, cable-free re-charging of electric vehicles, smart phones and laptops to collecting solar electricity from orbiting solar farms, wireless power transfer (WPT) technologies offer consumers and society enormous benefits. Written by innovators in the field, this comprehensive resource explains the fundamental principles and latest advances in WPT and illustrates key applications of this emergent technology.

Key features and coverage include:
* The fundamental principles of WPT to practical applications on dynamic charging and static charging of EVs and smartphones.
* Theories for inductive power transfer (IPT) such as the coupled inductor model, gyrator circuit model, and magnetic mirror model.
* IPTs for road powered EVs, including controller, compensation circuit, electro-magnetic field cancel, large tolerance, power rail segmentation, and foreign object detection.
* IPTs for static charging for EVs and large tolerance and capacitive charging issues, as well as IPT mobile applications such as free space omnidirectional IPT by dipole coils and 2D IPT for robots.
* Principle and applications of capacitive power transfer.
* Synthesized magnetic field focusing, wireless nuclear instrumentation, and future WPT.

A technical asset for engineers in the power electronics, internet of things and automotive sectors, Wireless Power Transfer for Electric Vehicles and Mobile Devices is an essential design and analysis guide and an important reference for graduate and higher undergraduate students preparing for careers in these industries.

Preface vii

Part I Introduction

1 Introduction toMobile Power Electronics 3

2 Introduction toWireless Power Transfer (WPT) 19

3 Introduction to Electric Vehicles (EVs) 43

Part II Theories for Inductive Power Transfer (IPT)

4 Coupled Coil Model 53

5 Gyrator Circuit Model 67

6 MagneticMirror Model 99

7 General Unified Dynamic Phasor 129

Part III Dynamic Charging for Road-Powered Electric Vehicles (RPEVs)

8 Introduction to Dynamic Charging 155

9 History of RPEVs 161

10 Narrow-Width Single-Phase Power Rail (I-type) 209

11 Narrow-Width Dual-Phase Power Rail (I-type) 235

12 Ultra-Slim Power Rail (S-type) 251

13 Controller Design of Dynamic Chargers 273

14 Compensation Circuit 287

15 Electromagnetic Field (EMF) Cancel 313

16 Large Tolerance Design 337

17 Power Rail Segmentation and Deployment 357

Part IV Static Charging for Pure EVs and Plug-in Hybrid EVs

18 Introduction to Static Charging 379

19 Asymmetric Coils for Large Tolerance EV Chargers 399

20 DQ Coils for Large Tolerance EV Chargers 425

21 Capacitive Power Transfer for EV Chargers Coupler 435

22 Foreign Object Detection 457

Part V Mobile Applications for Phones and Robots

23 Review of Coupled Magnetic Resonance System(CMRS) 473

24 Mid-Range IPT by Dipole Coils 491

25 Long-Range IPT by Dipole Coils 513

26 Free-Space OmnidirectionalMobile Chargers 529

27 Two-Dimensional Omnidirectional IPT for Robots 563

Part VI Special Applications ofWireless Power

28 Magnetic Field Focusing 579

29 Wireless Nuclear Instrumentation 587

30 The Future ofWireless Power 607

Index 613
DR CHUN T. RIM developed the wireless power transfer (WPT) of on-line electric vehicles that was selected as 'the 50 Best Inventions of 2010' by TIME and 'the first of 10 emerging technologies in 2013' by the World Economic Forum. Dr. Rim also developed WPT for stationary EV charging, mobile devices, robots, and drones. He demonstrated the first 5m and 12m distance WPT using innovative dipole coils and also envisioned new theories for WPT such as magnetic mirror, gyrator circuit model, and phasor transformation. Since 2013, Dr. Rim has served as an Associate Editor of IEEE Trans. on Power Electronics (TPEL) and IEEE JESTPE. He also served as a Guest Editor of Special Issue on WPT at TPEL, JESTPE, TPEL, and Trans. on Industrial Electronics. He has served as the General Chair of 2015/2016/2017 IEEE WoW and published more than 160 articles, 14 books, and 150 patents, mostly on WPT.

DR. CHRIS MI is a Fellow and Professor at San Diego State University. His research interests are in electric and hybrid vehicles. He has taught tutorials and seminars on the subject of HEVs/PHEVs for numerous government agencies and global companies. Dr. Chris Mi started his research in wireless power transfer (WPT) in 2008. His team has developed a number of unique topologies of WPT systems, including the double sided LCC-compensated topology, the large power capacitive wireless power transfer (CPT) technology, and low-ripple dynamic WPT. Dr. Mi is an Area Editor of IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology and was an Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics and IEEE Transactions on Industry Applications.

C. Mi, University of Michigan-Dearborn