Power Flow Modeling of Wireless Power Transfer for EVs Charging and Discharging in V2G Applications

Author(s):  
A. A. S. Mohamed ◽  
Alberto Berzoy ◽  
Osama Mohammed
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (18) ◽  
pp. 3769
Author(s):  
Yi-Hung Liao ◽  
Yue Lin

This paper presents a bidirectional wireless power transfer system for mobile power applications. A novel 2-switch bidirectional wireless power transfer system with dual-side control is proposed for mobile power applications. Although only two switches are adopted, the energy can be transferred from the transmitter side to the receiver side and vice versa. The term bidirectional means that the power-flow is bidirectional and also that the transmitter is also a receiver and the receiver is also a transmitter. The output energy can be easily controlled by the duty ratios of the two switches. Thus, the proposed bidirectional power transfer system uses only one circuit to achieve bidirectional power transfer. Hence, the system cost and volume can be reduced so that the system is small and convenient for mobile power systems, portable and/or wearable electronic devices. A prototype system is constructed and the experimental results verify the validity of the proposed bidirectional wireless power transfer system.


Electronics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weikun Cai ◽  
Xiaoyang Lai ◽  
Dianguang Ma ◽  
Houjun Tang ◽  
Khurram Hashmi ◽  
...  

For high-power single-transmitter single-receiver wireless power transfer (STSRWPT) systems, the coils suffer from high voltage and current stresses. With increased power requirements, the coils become bottlenecks for power flow. To increase the power level, multiple-transmitter multiple-receiver wireless power transfer (MTMRWPT) systems with parallel circuits are developed that reduce the voltage and current stresses on the coils and improve power-handling capability. Firstly, an improved current distribution (ICD) control strategy is developed to simultaneously achieve high transfer efficiency, balanced current distribution and constant output voltage. Secondly, it is further shown that the ICD control strategy has the advantage that the currents at the transmitter coils are balanced and it reduces the control complexity simultaneously. Thirdly, an asynchronous particle swarm optimization (APSO) algorithm is applied to the ICD control strategy to verify the feasibility of the proposed control strategy. Lastly, a two-transmitter two-receiver wireless power transfer (WPT) system based on the ICD control strategy is proved to obtain an efficiency of more than 89.1% and provides the target output voltage 20 V with balanced current distribution.


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