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Author Topic: Focussed magnetic fields for power transmission  (Read 4546 times)
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Superlens' Extends Range of Wireless Power Transfer
Jan. 10, 2014 β€” Inventor Nikola Tesla imagined the technology to transmit energy through thin air almost a century ago, but experimental attempts at the feat have so far resulted in cumbersome devices that only work over very small distances. But now, Duke University researchers have demonstrated the feasibility of wireless power transfer using low-frequency magnetic fields over distances much larger than the size of the transmitter and receiver.

The advance comes from a team of researchers in Duke's Pratt School of Engineering, who used metamaterials to create a "superlens" that focuses magnetic fields. The superlens translates the magnetic field emanating from one power coil onto its twin nearly a foot away, inducing an electric current in the receiving coil.
The experiment was the first time such a scheme has successfully sent power safely and efficiently through the air with an efficiency many times greater than what could be achieved with the same setup minus the superlens.
The results, an outcome of a partnership with the Toyota Research Institute of North America, appear online in Scientific Reports (Nature Publishing Group) on Jan. 10.
"For the first time we have demonstrated that the efficiency of magneto-inductive wireless power transfer can be enhanced over distances many times larger than the size of the receiver and transmitter," said Yaroslav Urzhumov, assistant research professor of electrical and computer engineering at Duke University. "This is important because if this technology is to become a part of everyday life, it must conform to the dimensions of today's pocket-sized mobile electronics."
In the experiment, Yaroslav and the joint Duke-Toyota team created a square superlens, which looks like a few dozen giant Rubik's cubes stacked together. Both the exterior and interior walls of the hollow blocks are intricately etched with a spiraling copper wire reminiscent of a microchip. The geometry of the coils and their repetitive nature form a metamaterial that interacts with magnetic fields in such a way that the fields are transmitted and confined into a narrow cone in which the power intensity is much higher.
On one side of the superlens, the researchers placed a small copper coil with an alternating electric current running through it, which creates a magnetic field around the coil. That field, however, drops in intensity and power transfer efficiency extremely quickly, the further away it gets.
"If your electromagnet is one inch in diameter, you get almost no power just three inches away," said Urzhumov. "You only get about 0.1 percent of what's inside the coil." But with the superlens in place, he explained, the magnetic field is focused nearly a foot away with enough strength to induce noticeable electric current in an identically sized receiver coil.
Urzhumov noted that metamaterial-enhanced wireless power demonstrations have been made before at a research laboratory of Mitsubishi Electric, but with one important caveat: the distance the power was transmitted was roughly the same as the diameter of the power coils. In such a setup, the coils would have to be quite large to work over any appreciable distance.
"It's actually easy to increase the power transfer distance by simply increasing the size of the coils," explained Urzhumov. "That quickly becomes impractical, because of space limitations in any realistic scenario. We want to be able to use small-size sources and/or receivers, and that's what the superlens enables us to do."
Another trivial way to increase the power in the wireless receiver is, of course, to simply crank up the power. While this is practical to an extent, at high enough powers the fields would start trying to yank the watch off of your wrist. Despite this limitation, however, Urzhumov said that magnetic fields have distinct advantages over the use of electric fields for wireless power transfer.
"Most materials don't absorb magnetic fields very much, making them much safer than electric fields," he said. "In fact, the FCC approves the use of 3-Tesla magnetic fields for medical imaging, which are absolutely enormous relative to what we might need for powering consumer electronics. The technology is being designed with this increased safety in mind."
Going forward, Urzhumov wants to drastically upgrade the system to make it more suitable for realistic power transfer scenarios, such as charging mobile devices as they move around in a room. He plans to build a dynamically tunable superlens, which can control the direction of its focused power cone.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/01/140110153201.htm
   
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@PhysicsProf

I find this field of study fascinating because of the implications of field compression. Generally we have two options, 1)the magnet moves and the coil sees an expanding field or 2)the field expands from a coil and another coil sees an expanding field(mutual induction). They are equal and both are opposed, one by an opposing field and two by an increased field density saturating the source. The phenomena are different however the apparent work performed in each is equivalent.

However we do have options that few have considered which Tesla explored in some of his earlier lectures. First the two examples are simply a uniform field gradient which is either expanding into a region or contracting from it. Obviously this cannot apply to a uniform field gradient which is already in place and expanding/contracting in a region outside the context of the source which created it in the first place. You see all the known laws are completely dependent on the translation of force or change in field density effecting the source. Hence all the concern over the phenomena of supposed magnetic waves.

Now if we have a uniform magnetic field gradient radiating outward from our source and for some reason the field compressed towards a singular point outside the source then really all bets are off. Faraday went into this at length which is why he stated that the field should be considered as distinct from the source which created it however the translation of force must always return to the source... so what if it doesn't?.

In any case I have found our simple laws are dependent on simple events which we repeat over and over never understanding the laws well enough to understand there limitations.

AC


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Comprehend and Copy Nature... Viktor Schauberger

β€œThe first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool.”― Richard P. Feynman
   
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