Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants

This paper presents a design methodology for a 3-coil magnetic resonance wireless power transfer (WPT) system with a long transfer distance (up to 20 cm) and a small implanted receiver (RX) (2mm in diameter) at a specific frequency. The methodology aims to find out the optimal value of dimensional p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liyu Huang, Alan Murray, Brian W. Flynn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9229059/
id doaj-688395e6726f47729ab9aa8c761cec30
record_format Article
spelling doaj-688395e6726f47729ab9aa8c761cec302021-03-30T04:09:57ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-01819318319320110.1109/ACCESS.2020.30319609229059Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-ImplantsLiyu Huang0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5099-3448Alan Murray1Brian W. Flynn2https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9923-3047Institute of Bioengineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.Institute of Bioengineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.Institute of Bioengineering, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.This paper presents a design methodology for a 3-coil magnetic resonance wireless power transfer (WPT) system with a long transfer distance (up to 20 cm) and a small implanted receiver (RX) (2mm in diameter) at a specific frequency. The methodology aims to find out the optimal value of dimensional parameters (i.e., coil diameter, gap interval and coil turn number) of the transmitter (TX) coils to maximize the magnetic field strength at the target distance while keeping the coil self-resonant frequency (SRF) twice of the target operational frequency. Firstly, the circuit model of the TX circuits is developed, which include a single-turn coupling coil and a multi-turn primary coil. Secondly, the co-dependences between the dimensional parameters are analyzed, which shows the dominant factors and secondary factors of each dimensional parameter, and how the optimal values of dimensional parameters are changed by these factors. Based on the analysis, design flow of the TX circuit is proposed to decide the optimal values of dimensional parameters given the transfer distance, source voltage, operational frequency and wire diameter. Using the design flow, optimal values of dimensional parameters are predicted for 20-cm transfer distance and 16-cm transfer distance and are verified with finite element analysis (FEA) software COMSOL Multiphysics. With the optimal TX design, the power received by a 2-mm ferrite core solenoid RX is calculated. At 20 cm transfer distance, up to 4.3 mW can be achieved in air, and 0.8 mW can be achieved in conductive human tissue.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9229059/Long transfer distancemm-sized implantsoptimal dimensional parameterwireless power transfer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liyu Huang
Alan Murray
Brian W. Flynn
spellingShingle Liyu Huang
Alan Murray
Brian W. Flynn
Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants
IEEE Access
Long transfer distance
mm-sized implants
optimal dimensional parameter
wireless power transfer
author_facet Liyu Huang
Alan Murray
Brian W. Flynn
author_sort Liyu Huang
title Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants
title_short Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants
title_full Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants
title_fullStr Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants
title_full_unstemmed Optimal Design of a 3-Coil Wireless Power Transfer System for Deep Micro-Implants
title_sort optimal design of a 3-coil wireless power transfer system for deep micro-implants
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This paper presents a design methodology for a 3-coil magnetic resonance wireless power transfer (WPT) system with a long transfer distance (up to 20 cm) and a small implanted receiver (RX) (2mm in diameter) at a specific frequency. The methodology aims to find out the optimal value of dimensional parameters (i.e., coil diameter, gap interval and coil turn number) of the transmitter (TX) coils to maximize the magnetic field strength at the target distance while keeping the coil self-resonant frequency (SRF) twice of the target operational frequency. Firstly, the circuit model of the TX circuits is developed, which include a single-turn coupling coil and a multi-turn primary coil. Secondly, the co-dependences between the dimensional parameters are analyzed, which shows the dominant factors and secondary factors of each dimensional parameter, and how the optimal values of dimensional parameters are changed by these factors. Based on the analysis, design flow of the TX circuit is proposed to decide the optimal values of dimensional parameters given the transfer distance, source voltage, operational frequency and wire diameter. Using the design flow, optimal values of dimensional parameters are predicted for 20-cm transfer distance and 16-cm transfer distance and are verified with finite element analysis (FEA) software COMSOL Multiphysics. With the optimal TX design, the power received by a 2-mm ferrite core solenoid RX is calculated. At 20 cm transfer distance, up to 4.3 mW can be achieved in air, and 0.8 mW can be achieved in conductive human tissue.
topic Long transfer distance
mm-sized implants
optimal dimensional parameter
wireless power transfer
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9229059/
work_keys_str_mv AT liyuhuang optimaldesignofa3coilwirelesspowertransfersystemfordeepmicroimplants
AT alanmurray optimaldesignofa3coilwirelesspowertransfersystemfordeepmicroimplants
AT brianwflynn optimaldesignofa3coilwirelesspowertransfersystemfordeepmicroimplants
_version_ 1724182197932392448