Metamaterials-inspired resonator for wireless power transfer systems

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Abstract

Metamaterial-inspired resonator for a wireless power transfer system is proposed and studied numerically. The resonator consists of two orthogonal wire layers separated by a short distance. To reduce the resonant frequency from several hundreds of MHz it is placed in a background dielectric material with high permittivity. By tuning the permittivity of the background material, the radiation losses can be significantly reduced resulting in a high Q-factor of 900. The wireless power transfer efficiency greater than 80% from the wire resonator to a small loop receiver has been numerically demonstrated at the frequency of 19 MHz. The large area of the proposed resonator (50 cm 50 cm) offers a possibility to charge multiple receivers simultaneously.

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Markvart, A., Song, M., Kosulnikov, S., Glybovski, S., Belov, P., Simovski, C., & Kapitanova, P. (2018). Metamaterials-inspired resonator for wireless power transfer systems. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 1092). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/1092/1/012083

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