A radiating near-field method of recharging and activating medical implants using a 2.4-GHz rectifying patch antenna (rectenna) is designed and tested. Traditional near-field charging uses magnetically coupled coils, but these… Click to show full abstract
A radiating near-field method of recharging and activating medical implants using a 2.4-GHz rectifying patch antenna (rectenna) is designed and tested. Traditional near-field charging uses magnetically coupled coils, but these are highly sensitive to misalignments between the transmitter and receiver. In contrast, the proposed design employs the principles of wireless power transfer using radiating antennas. These antennas provide a misalignment-insensitive power delivery method, even when the receive antenna footprint is small (27.5 mm × 19.75 mm). A misalignment analysis is performed up to 15 cm, showing a maximum loss of 7.5 dB. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, a rectenna receiver was fabricated consisting of a patch antenna attached to a radio frequency (RF) rectifier. This integrated rectifier is a voltage quadrupling circuit that provides RF–DC rectification with efficiency of 40% at 0 dBm. For validation, a real-time actuation of a medical drug pump is demonstrated using only wirelessly transmitted power with no additional power storage elements.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.