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A Technical Seminar Report on

WIRELESS POWER TRANSMISSION

Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements For the award of the degree of
BACHELOR OF TECHNOLOGY
In

Electronics & Communication Engineering Submitted By R.SREEDHAR REDDY 10R11A04B2

Department of Electronics & Communication Engineering


GEETHANJALI COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY,
Cheeryal (V), Keesara (M), R.R. Dist, Hyderabad 501 301 (Affiliated to Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University, Hyderabad Accredited By NBA)

2010-2014

GEETHANJALI COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING &TECHNOLOGY

Department of Electronics & Communication Engineering

CERTIFICATE

This is to certify that the Technical seminar report titled WIRELESS POWER

TRANSMISSION being submitted by R.Sreedhar Reddy, bearing hall ticket number


10R11A04B2, in partial fulfillment for the award of the Degree of Bachelor of Technology in Electronics & Communication Engineering is a record of bonafied work carried out under my guidance and supervision. The results embodied in this report have not been submitted to any other University for the award of any degree.

Seminar coordinator Mrs.B.Sreelatha Associate Professor

Dr C Narasimhulu HoD

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

I am a student of ECE department of Geethanjali College of Engineering and Technology willing to convey heartfelt thanks to Dr. S. Udaya Kumar, Principal of the college for his wonderful guidance and encouragement given to me to move ahead in the execution of this project. I am highly grateful to the great personality in the field of Electronics, none other than Dr. C. V. Narasimhulu, Head of the Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering of GCET for guiding and taking care of our career in this field. Lastly, I would thank our coordinator Mrs. B. Sreelatha for giving us this opportunity to present the technical project work. Above all, we are very much thankful to the management of Geethanjali College of Engineering & Technology which was established by the high profiled intellectuals for the cause of Technical Education in modern era.

With Regards

R.Sreedhar Reddy

10R11A04B2

Index

Executive Summary .. II 1. 1.1 1.2 1.3 2. 3. 4. 4.1 4.2 4.3 Introduction .. 1 Objective .. 1 Motivation .... 1 Background .. 2 Project Description and Goals ...3 Technical Specification .....5 Design Approach and Details ....6 Design Approach ....6 Codes and Standards ..... 9 Constraints, Alternatives, and Tradeoffs ...10

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Wireless power transmission (WPT) devices are on the forefront of electronics technology making them potentially marketable products. WPT devices have been thought to be possible since Nikola Teslas transmission model in 1897. The newest technologies rely on inductive coupling techniques to transmit power between transmitting and receiving coils. The frequency at which the device transfers power between the transmitter and receiver is dependent on the size of the coils. The higher the frequency at which the device is transmitting, the smaller the transmitting and receiving coils must be.

Current wireless power transmitters are capable of transmitting current at distances of less than one inch up to one foot. These distances allow for use in small consumer electronic devices such as electric toothbrushes and razors. While these applications have proven to be profitable, the market still remains open for use in larger electronic devices. An aspect of WPT that has been largely unexplored is the ability to charge batteries and other electronic circuits.Grids can also be integrated into new construction designs to provide large scale wireless power coverage to all electronic devices and building utilities.

The design team implemented an oscillator at high frequencies (10MHz) producing inductive coupling between two 60 cm inductive coils, thus WPT was achieved. The illuminating of a 0.18 W light bulb was achieved and the charging of 1.2 V battery was accomplished using a rectifying circuit that canceled harmonics and therefore transferred the maximum amount of power. This method of WPT can propagate power over a distance of 1.27m meters providing functionality that is not readily available in other WPT devices in the consumer market.

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