1. Introduction
Wireless power transfer (WPT) [
1] offers a novel means of delivering energy from a power source to a target load through the air instead of the wire that is conventionally used for electricity-powered devices. The WPT method has excellent flexibility and non-contact characteristics. In the near future, it will be an ideal technical solution for powering electrical equipment in various applications within certain fields; for example, it will be ideal for portable electronic devices, implantable medical devices, integrated circuits (ICs), solar-powered satellites, electric vehicles, and unmanned aerial vehicles. Inductive power transfer (IPT) is based on the changing magnetic field generated by alternating currents in the primary coil when the voltage and current induced through the air gap in the secondary coil. IPT is the most widely used WPT technology.
The class-E power amplifier [
2,
3] is simple and highly efficient in WPT applications, providing an additional degree of design freedom that enables optimal WPT operation over a wide range of operating conditions [
4]. However, class-E power amplifiers still suffer from sensitivity to the changes in load impedance values due to changing distance from the receiver to the transmitter or changes in the orientation of the receiver. Compensation methods include replacing the capacitor on the receiver side and adjusting the switching frequency, as proposed in [
3], controlling the duty cycle and the DC feed inductance, as proposed in [
5,
6], and implementing a voltage-controlled capacitor and a NIC (Negative Impedance Converter), as proposed in [
7]. High efficiency can be achieved by applying zero-voltage switching (ZVS) and zero-current switching (ZCS) by monitoring and tuning the inductive link dynamically. The ZVS produces soft switching at a switching frequency in the megahertz range. Furthermore, the impedance matching approach [
8], charging/discharging the ultra-capacitor bank [
9], and regulating the self/mutual inductance [
10] are useful for tracking the maximum efficiency and improving system stability. Class-E power amplifiers belong to the class of high-frequency, high-efficiency electronic power circuits [
11,
12] that simultaneously consider the effects of the transistor’s parasitic elements [
13,
14].
Class-E power amplifiers use transformers with loosely coupled windings, where the coupling coefficient
k can range from 0 to 0.9. Changes in the coupling coefficient over a wide range may cause the inverter to operate under non-ZVS conditions, thereby decreasing the efficiency. The challenging task is to ensure ZVS operation over a wide range of coupling coefficients. Because operation occurs in a relatively high-frequency range, the power efficiency is limited by the switching device and the associated control scheme. Compared with silicon-based devices, GaN high-electron-mobility transistors (HEMTs) have a much lower gate charge and lower output capacitance. GaN HEMTs have excellent performance for input signals with different duty cycles, making it possible to realize high-efficiency operations and considerably improve efficiency [
15,
16]. The currents flowing through the magnetizing inductance and load are distributed such that the transistor operates at ZVS over a wide range of loads and coupling coefficients. The adjustable duty cycle control scheme achieves maximum power transfer in the resonant wireless power transfer system.
The pulse width modulation (PWM) duty control method is a widely used approach in IC design because digital signal processors can easily provide the required signal. However, most platforms for generating PWM signals only support applications in the tens of kilohertz range. These solutions are not suitable for applications where GaN operates in the megahertz frequency range. One means of overcoming this limitation is using a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) device, which can generate high-precision PWM signals with key parameters such as duty cycle and frequency even if the operating frequency increases to tens of megahertz [
17]. The main advantages of FPGA-based controllers are rapid response, precise switching, and flexible adjustment of the dead time and switching frequency. These advantages are suitable for driving numerous semiconductor-switching devices in practical applications. Tavares et al. [
18] presented a static power converter developed using an FPGA platform; this converter was able to generate a PWM gating signal with a frequency reaching 2 MHz for driving GaN power field-effect transistors (FETs).
PWM is usually implemented using a voltage comparator that compares a reference voltage with a generated sawtooth signal. However, when the operating frequency increases, the comparator should complete the comparison within a few tens of nanoseconds. This causes PWM controllers based on the ramp comparator to malfunction, meaning that additional effort must be spent to adapt to megahertz operation. Digital PWM (DPWM) is implemented using a counter and comparison structure and resembles analog PWM based on sawtooth signals. The functionality is as follows: if the duty cycle command exceeds the counter value, which is equivalent to a sawtooth signal, the output is ON; when the counter reaches the duty cycle, the output turns OFF. Compared with the sequential encoding method, one-hot encoding and Gray encoding methods with fewer states are used to create varying pulses [
19]. However, high resolution cannot be obtained, because the minimum time step is equal to the clock period of the counter. In addition, the power consumption is directly proportional to the clock frequency [
20]. To address this issue, a delay-line-based voltage-to-duty-cycle (V2D) technique was presented that did not use any comparators. Cheng et al. [
21] presented a delay-line DPWM architecture based on a phase-locked loop (PLL) and carry chain flag. This architecture had three parts: the first coarse delay module based on a counter, the second coarse delay module based on a PLL, and the fine delay module based on a carry chain. The main purpose is to compensate for the propagation delay through the tool command language, because propagation delays in the internal logics and interconnects may increase the duty cycle, thereby affecting the regulation performance of the converter, especially when the delay is of the same magnitude as the switching period. The duty-cycle increment phenomenon caused by superposition of critical path delays affects the regulation performance of converters with a switching frequency of tens of megahertz or higher. Huang et al. [
22,
23] used two voltage-to-delay cells to convert the voltage difference into a delay-time difference. A charge pump was used to charge or discharge the loop filter depending on whether the feedback voltage was larger or smaller than the reference voltage. A V2D controller based on delay-line control techniques was implemented to replace the classical ramp-comparator-based V2D controller and achieve a wide duty cycle, which was employed in a digitally controlled voltage-mode buck converter. The main advantages of delay-line DPWM are high resolution and low power consumption. However, this method exhibits low linearity and non-monotonic behavior in some cases. For a class-E dc–dc converter, the accuracy of the frequency, phase, and pulse width of the signal is critical in circuit applications.
Within the similar context of delay-line DPWM, this paper proposes a PWM method enabling a switching frequency of up to 7 MHz for driving a GaN power FET. In the first stage, a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) is used to generate periodic square signals of variable frequency. The frequency of the output voltage can be varied using the input dc voltage. The duty cycle generator of the second stage is designed to have two functions: to generate a duty cycle of less than 50% and achieve wide range correction. This paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 briefly introduces the class-E amplifier circuit and the specifications and characteristics of the GaN FET.
Section 3 describes the proposed circuit and provides derivations. Then, we illustrate and simulate different capacitor-coupled difference amplifiers (CCDAs) in
Section 4. The experimental results obtained to validate the duty generation circuit are provided in
Section 5. Finally, the conclusions and some high-frequency GaN-based potential power applications that could take advantage of the present work are presented in
Section 6.
2. Class-E Amplifier Circuit and the Gate Drive
The high-level block diagram for the resonant wireless power transfer system shown in
Figure 1a consists of four modules, including the tuning strategy for the WPT, the xCCDA design, the VFPWM feedback control, and the class-E amplifier for wireless power transfer. The class-E amplifier as shown in
Figure 1b, which consists of a VFPWM circuit that generates the switching signal to the gate drive, is used in resonant WPT applications. The nominal values of the circuit parameters on the switching power supply side (or the transmitter side) and the equivalent values on the impedance load side (or the receiver side together with the transmitter antenna) are shown in
Table 1. The load impedance is simplified into a resistor
with a capacitor
. The capacitor
is the parasitic capacitor of the D-mode GaN HEMT. A charge pump gate drive with output voltage
from 0 to a negative voltage (e.g., −7 V) is used to turn the GaN HEMT on and off according to the signal
from 5 to 0 V. The GaN HEMT, which has no body diode, is periodically switched to form a sinusoidal resonant current
. In the equivalent circuit, as shown
Figure 1, the power transfer efficiency (PTE) is defined as the output power on the receiver
divided by the input power on the transmitter
. The switching of the GaN HEMT transistor
, including the switching frequency and turn-on time duty, directly determines the distance and efficiency of the WPT application. The experimental layout is shown in
Figure 2. In our previous paper [
24], the governing equations of the ZVS control for a class-E WPT unit was derived. The ZVS and its derivative, the zero-current switching (ZCS), conditions are achieved by adjusting the duty cycle and resonant frequency simultaneously. In the previously published paper [
25], a minimum power input control strategy was proposed, which results in the switching frequency
fo and the duty cycle
δ the WPT being based on empirical data or equations that can yield the optimal power transfer efficiency.
The switching frequency
fo and the duty cycle
δ are subsequently converted into the input voltages of the PWM generator, which consists of the VCO and capacitor-coupled difference amplifier to form a variable-frequency PWM module. The VFPWM module generates a switching signal
vS to the gate driver. In
Figure 1,
is the zero-order hold transfer function matrix that converts the switching frequency
fo and the duty cycle
δ into the corresponding voltages
VF and
Vδ, which is described in detail in the following sections with respect to different VFPWM topologies.
2.1. Charge Pump Gate Drive
The charge pump gate drive presented by Okamoto [
26] is useful in class-E amplifiers. The previous disadvantage of charge pump circuits—the leakage of current through the diode reverse saturation current—is not a problem because of the high-frequency switching. However, the class-E amplifier still suffers the effect of
linking to the high voltage switching of
. As illustrated in
Figure 3, we first assume that
floating. The corresponding gate drive design parameters are presented in
Table 1.
As shown in
Figure 3, the gate drive receives the PWM signal from a PWM circuit. This PWM circuit is capable of operating at an adjustable frequency around 6.78 MHz, and the duty cycle is adjustable from 20% to 50%, meaning that the gate drive can be successfully switched to perform the WPT task. High-frequency PWM ICs such as the TI SLUS489 with the maximum frequency of 2 MHz cannot meet the required frequency of 6.78 MHz. The other commercially PWM IC, the AD9560, is a high-speed, digitally programmable pulse width modulator with an output pulse width proportional to an 8-bit data input value. The pulse width can be changed every clock cycle by up to 50 MHz. The drawbacks of this IC include the requirement of a high-speed digital processor such as the ESP8266 Wi-Fi module to fulfill the 6.78-MHz control, which means that it cannot be used in low-cost applications, and that the 8-bit resolution for the output pulse width is insufficient for resonant tuning in 6.78-MHz resonant WPT applications in practice. The purpose of this paper is to construct a low-cost, PWM, high-frequency-resolution circuit feasible for 6.78-MHz resonant WPT applications. A VCO or voltage-to-frequency converter may be useful for the frequency control needed for resonant WPT; however, the ICs are usually designed for a 50% duty cycle. To achieve WPT with a transmission of 100 cm and greater, such as that shown in
Figure 2, adjustments to both the frequency and duty cycle are required. We require a circuit that converts the VCO signal into the variable-frequency pulse width modulation (VFPWM) wave form. In the following sections, we first introduce the difference amplifier coupled with capacitors that can convert a 50% duty cycle square wave into a PWM signal.
2.2. The Minimum Power Input Control Strategy
By controlling the duty ratio δ and the switching frequency simultaneously, minimum power input control [
25], which trades off the PDL (Power Delivered to Load) for the switching loss of the GaN HEMT, can be used to obtain the optimal PTE (Power Transfer Efficiency). The minimum power input control strategy, which concerns the feedback from PRU (Power Receiving Unit), consists of the following steps.
Step 1. According to the PRU feedback regarding the distance between the PTU (Power Transmitting Unit) and PRU and the power transfer requirement from the PRU, we determine the input voltage
VDD. The input voltage, according to the experimental data [
24], as shown in
Figure 4, should be tuned to a low voltage for short-range WPT and a high voltage for long-range WPT.
Step 2. The input power of the PTU is determined from the feedback power requirement from all PRUs. Consequently, the duty cycle δ (or duty ratio %) is determined from the input power and the given input voltage
VDD from Step 1. As shown in
Figure 5, which is interpolated in [
25], it is observed that the duty ratio δ% increases monotonically, in general, with increasing PTU input power.
Step 3. From the given input voltage
VDD and the duty ratio
δ% calculated in step 2, we determine the switching frequency
fo according to the empirical function shown in
Figure 6, which is interpolated in [
25].
The goal of the minimum power input control strategy is to optimize the power efficiency of the WPT system when multiple PTUs and multiple PRUs are interacting. The control strategy will calculate the best switching frequency and duty ratio % for each individual PTU.
2.3. Parameters of the Class-E Amplifier and WPT System
Two arrangements of PTU/PRU inductor settings are used in the experiments. The data were reported in [
24] and are reproduced in
Table 2. The distance between the PTU and the PRU, as well as the orientation of the PRU toward the PTU, affects the coupling coefficient in the wireless power transfer. The tuning of both switching frequency
fo and the duty ratio
δ must respond to the coupling coefficient change dynamically in order to achieve the impedance matching condition. The nominal input/output parameters of the class-E amplifier and WPT system in this research are shown in
Table 3. The nominal values are only reference values for typical 10 W and 40 cm distance resonant WPT applications.
5. Experimental Results
A high gain bandwidth product operational amplifier is used, namely the MAX4265 400-MHz operational amplifier, which yields gain of nearly 100, that is
with a nearly 60° phase lag, i.e.,
, at the operation frequency around 4 MHz. Examples of the VFPWM output from a VCO versus
and the output in a dCCDA experiment are shown in
Figure 17a. The circuit topology is presented in
Figure 7. The circuit parameters are similar to those listed in
Table 4. The operation voltage,
, in this dCCDA configuration is
V, and the duty ratio,
, is
. The phase lag of
versus the output from the VCO is approximately 50°, which matches the phase lag of the opamp.
The experimental results of the VFPWM using a high-resistance cCCDA in series with a VCO, with circuit parameters as shown in
Table 4, are illustrated in
Figure 17b. The VCO generates nearly 50% duty ratio output when the output of the low-resistance cCCDA is of the duty ratio
. The phase lag of
versus the output from the VCO is also approximately 50°.
To understand the influence of capacitance in this cCCDA configuration, we measure the duty ratio
and tuning results versus operation voltage
and compare them with the theoretical result obtained using Equation (19). The parameters
and
in
Table 4 are set to
and 1, respectively. The parameter
in
Table 4 is set to two capacitances,
and
, respectively, according to the two
terminals of the amplifier in
Figure 9. The selection of
and
could be many combinations.
Figure 18 shows the results for
, and
varies from 9 to 23 pF when
R = 20 kΩ and
.
Then, only three combinations of (
), that is, (
,
), (
,
), and (
,
), are implemented in the experiments, and a comparison of the measurements with the experimental results of Equation (19) is presented in
Figure 19. The duty ratio responses of the three capacitance combinations match the theoretical response; however, the combination with identical capacitances, namely (
) = (
,
), is closest to the theoretical response. Thus, the VFPWM design of the cCCDA configuration is well balanced in practice.
Figure 20 illustrates the influence of resistance on the relationship between the duty ratio and operation voltage
in the cCCDA configuration. The
values are all close to
when
, but they decrease slightly when the resistance in
Table 4 increases from
to
. The limitation values of
, when the duty ratios are diminished, move away from the cutoff operation voltage at
when the resistances are increased from
to
. The intersection of the duty ratio curves in
Figure 20 is located at approximately
, probably because we set a threshold of
when analyzing the experimental results.
The results in
Figure 19 and
Figure 20 provide the transfer function between duty ratio
(%) and the control voltage of
for the VFPWM circuit associated with the high-resistance cCCDA. The switching control depicted in
Figure 1 consisting of the transfer matrix could be formulated into the following equation.
The gain
from
to
are piecewise linear functions interpolated from
Figure 19 and
Figure 20 according to the selection of (
) and
.
The VFPWM driving circuit PCB was fabricated according to
Figure 15, as shown in
Figure 21. The VFPWM was integrated into a WPT device, as shown in
Figure 22. It illustrates the validity of the cCCDA of the VFPWM in the WPT system application; the distance of the wireless transfer was more than 100 cm. In the photo in
Figure 23, it can be seen that all output connectors of the function generator are disconnected. The cCCDA is used instead of the function generator to provide the switching signal to the gate driver of the PTU. In addition, there are multiple PTUs powering multiple PRUs.
The power transfer efficiency was reported in [
24]. The maximum distance for 1 W power delivery can be as far as 140 cm when
vDS is ≥ 700 V and the corresponding input voltage
VDD is around 300 V. We achieved the same result as before. In addition, we surpassed the previous achievement by enabling MIMO (multiple input and multiple output) applications, because the function generator can only control a maximum of two PTUs at a time. Nevertheless, the VFPWM is much less inexpensive than the function generator, and it is very handy and small. In [
25], we derived a theory called the minimum power input control, which trades off PDL (Power Delivered to Load) for the switching loss of the GaN HEMT in order to yield the optimal PTE (Power Transfer Efficiency). However, the MIMO control was not shown in [
25], because the function generator Tektronix AFG 31054, which is a dual channel output equipment, does not allow easy management of the phase difference required for the operation of different PTUs in different arrangements. On the other hand, we were able to easily adjust the individual VFPWM boards in this paper to obtain the required phase difference among the PTUs and achieve the best power output for multiple PRUs.
The experiment of a MIMO WPT demo is depicted in
Figure 23, which uses the VFPWM shown in
Figure 21 to control class-E amplifier switching. In this experiment, we set
,
and
for the cCCDA. One of the VCO inputs
is set to 5 V. The measured results show a total power output from five PRUs of 9.26 W when the total power input from two PTUs is 45 W. The input signals to the charge pump gate drive and the drain-source voltage of the class-E amplifier are shown in
Figure 24. The control voltages of the VFPWM are shown in
Table 5. Compared to the theoretical results, the estimated value of the switching frequency closely matches the data read from
Figure 12. There is some difference, within 20%, between the estimated duty ratio
% from the measurement and the theoretical duty ratio
% interpolated from
Figure 20. The differences are a result of the input impedance of the charge pump gate drive and the input impedance of the GaN HEMT transistor, which can be eliminated by the closed loop control in the WPT system using the minimum power input control [
25].