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A TRANSMITTER OR A RECEIVER CONSISTING OF TWO

STRONGLY COUPLED RESONATORS FOR ENHANCED


RESONANT COUPLING IN WIRELESS POWER TRANSFER
ABSTRACT
An embedded system is a computer system with a dedicated function within a larger
mechanical or electrical system, often with real-time computing constraints It is embedded as
part of a complete device often including hardware and mechanical parts. By contrast, a generalpurpose computer, such as a personal computer (PC), is designed to be flexible and to meet a
wide range of end-user needs.
Embedded systems control many devices in common use today. Modern embedded
systems are often based on microcontrollers (i.e. CPUs with integrated memory and/or peripheral
interfaces). But ordinary microprocessors (using external chips for memory and peripheral
interface circuits) are also still common, especially in more complex systems. In either case, the
processor(s) used may be types ranging from rather general purpose to very specialized in certain
class of computations, or even custom designed for the application at hand. A common standard
class of dedicated processors is the digital signal processor (DSP).
This paper proposes a novel resonator structure for efficiency and transferred power
improvements: a transmitter (a receiver) that consists of two strongly coupled resonators. The
two strongly coupled resonators are embedded within a transmitter device (a receiver device) and
behave as a single resonator with enhanced performances. Unlike the conventional four-coil
system, the first and the fourth resonators are also designed to have high loaded-Q and maximum
cross couplings. Therefore, the first and the fourth resonators also take part in the coupled
resonance with opposite-side resonators.
This provides additional energy exchange path. The exact design guidelines are provided
for each different resonance topology from analytical derivation. It is analyzed and
experimentally demonstrated that the efficiency and the transferred power are increased by the
proposed two-resonator technique. For a 30 cm 25 cm parallel-resonant transmitter and an 18
cm 16 cm parallel-resonant receiver at 13-cm distance, the efficiency and the transferred power
with the proposed technique are 65.2% and 17.2 W, respectively, whereas those values without
the proposed technique are only 37.3% and 6.2 W.

PROPOSED SYSTEM:
Here we are going to see Medical Implantable Applications using WPT (Wireless Power
Transfer). AC supply will be given HF (High Frequency) Transformer, so that Transformer can
produce high magnetic flex in the primary side. It will be transferred to secondary side and using
filters it is given to DC regulator with help of regulator, supply will be given to Microcontroller.
And we can see the blood pressure values in LCD.

BLOCK DIAGRAM:

AC TO DC
FILTERED

230V AC
INPUT

DC TO AC
INVERTER

DC
REGULATOR
(5V DC)

HF
TRANSFORM
AER (AC 12V
UPTO 40 KHZ)

HF
RECTIFICATI
ON AND
FILTERS

ADC
PC
Heart
beat
Temp
ecg

PIC16F877A

HF
PRIMARY
SIDE

HF
SECONDARY
SIDE

HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS

AC TO DC CONVERTER (STEP DOWN)

DC TO AC INVERTER WITH HIGH FREQUENCY (AC 12V UPTO 40KHZ)

INDUCTOR COIL

BRIDGE RECTIFIER

5V REGULATOR

MICROCONTROLLER

BLOOD PRESSURE SENSOR

LCD

SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
MPLAB IDE COMPILER.
EMBEDDED C

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