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Influence of Exposure Guidelines on the Design of On-Body Inductive Power Transfer
Date Issued
2015-05-14
Date Available
2015-06-05T16:28:40Z
Abstract
Designers of on-body health sensing devices with inductive power transfer (IPT) face a number of trade-offs. Safe exposure limits should be maintained, and protective housing and padding are generally needed; however, these impose compromises on the power-transfer-system design. This paper analyses these trade-offs and proposes a design route to achieving high power transfer in the presence of field restrictions and separations for padding or housing materials. An IPT system using a Class D coil-driver and switched-mode power-conditioning is designed to provide regulated d.c. and energy storage. Compliance with ICNIRP 1998 guidelines is demonstrated, at a power level that is sufficient to power typical on-body medical sensing devices.
Other Sponsorship
UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
Type of Material
Conference Publication
Publisher
IEEE
Copyright (Published Version)
2015 IEEE
Web versions
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Journal
Wireless Power Transfer Conference (WPTC)
Conference Details
IEEE Wireless Power Transfer Conference, Boulder, Colorado, USA,13-15 May, 2015
ISBN
9781467374477
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
PID3715135.pdf
Size
844.47 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
8a86efc770cd0ff77c335a5abb46f047
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