Wireless applications inject a great deal of excess electromagnetic (EM) energy into the environment—energy which can be reused if properly recovered. A rectifying antenna, or rectenna as it is popularly known, is one such means for recovering that energy. In order to demonstrate the capabilities of such a design, a novel rectenna was developed for low-power operation at a single Industrial-Scientific-Medical (ISM) frequency of 2.45 GHz.The rectenna consists of a highly efficient photonic-band-gap (PBG) structure, a microstrip lowpass filter (LPF) with defected ground structure (DGS) circuitry, and a Schottky diode. To evaluate the rectenna, it was fabricated on a low-cost FR-4 printed-circuit-board (PCB) material with relative dielectric constant (εr) of 4.4 in the z-direction at 10 GHz and thickness of 1 mm. As will be shown, the rectenna achieves RF-to-DC conversion efficiency of 63% when processing received power of +18 dBm at 2.45 GHz.
Health Care Systems Oncology, Imaging and Pharmacology, particularly for Prostate Cancer. Technology that interests me: Sensors (Radar, Sonar, EO/IR,Fusion) Communications, Satellites, Unmanned Vehicles (UAV), Information Technology, Intelligent Transportation
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Rectenna converts RF to DC power@ 63% efficiency
Rectenna Serves 2.45-GHz Wireless Power Transmission | Systems content from Microwaves & RF
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