Abstract

Wireless power transfer (WPT) technology gained wide recognition over a decade ago following a resonance coupling WPT study conducted by a group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) [1]. WPT was originally proposed by Nicola Tesla at the end of the 19th century [2] based on a study of near-field inductive-coupling WPT and far-field WPT via radio waves. The first patent involving inductive WPT as a wireless charging system was granted in 1894 for the earliest electric vehicle (EV) [3]. Inductive WPT technology is based on a transformer and was commercialized as a wireless charger for an electric toothbrush in 1981 by Panasonic Corporation and as a power source for an integrated circuit (IC) card in 1995 by Sony Corporation. Daifuku Corporation produces many systems for material handling in stockroom and clean room applications [4]. From the 1970s through the 1990s, several research projects on wireless chargers for EVs were undertaken in New Zealand, the United States, and Europe. Advances in microwave technology led to improvements in WPT via radio waves, with many field experiments on microwave power transfer (MPT) conducted from the 1960s through the 1970s by William C. Brown in the United States [4]. The commercialization of RFID at the 920-MHz band started recently, and the proliferation of mobile rechargeable batteries since 2010 accentuates the need for a wireless charger in, e.g., mobile phones, EVs, and sensors for the Internet of Things (IoT).

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