Saturday, July 3, 2010

Wireless Energy Transfer using Magnetic Resonance

In 1899, Nikola Tesla, who had devised a type of resonant transformer called the Tesla coil, achieved a major breakthrough in his work by transmitting 100 million volts of electric power wirelessly over a distance of 26 miles to light up a bank of 200 light bulbs and run one electric motor. Tesla claimed to have achieved 95% efficiency, but the technology had
to be shelved because the effects of transmitting such high voltages in electric arcs would have been disastrous to humans and electrical equipment in the vicinity. This technology has been languishing in obscurity for a number of years, but the advent of portable devices such as mobiles, laptops, smartphones, MP3 players, etc warrants another look at the technology.
We propose the use of a new technology, based on strongly coupled magnetic resonance. It
consists of a transmitter, a current carrying copper coil, which acts as an electromagnetic resonator and a receiver, another copper coil of similar dimensions to which the device to be powered is attached. The transmitter emits a non-radiative magnetic field resonating at MHz frequencies, and the receiving unit resonates in that field. The resonant nature of the
process ensures a strong interaction between the sending and receiving unit, while interaction with rest of the environment is weak.

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2 comments: on "Wireless Energy Transfer using Magnetic Resonance"

Unknown said...

need more details about this topic

sujana said...

i want some more details adout this please send me

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