1999
DOI: 10.1109/22.780394
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A planar 4.5-GHz DC-DC power converter

Abstract: In this paper, we present two dc-dc converters that operate at a microwave frequency. The first converter consists of a Class-E switched-mode microwave amplifier, which performs the dc-ac conversion, and two half-wave diode rectifier outputs. The Class-E MESFET amplifier has a maximum power-added efficiency of 86%, corresponding drain efficiency of 95%, and 120 mW of output power at 4.5 GHz. The diode rectifier has a maximum conversion efficiency of 98% and an overall efficiency of 83%. The second converter co… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The applications of such power rectifiers include wireless power beaming [7], recycling power in highpower circuits [18], and ultra-fast switching integrated dc-dc converters with no magnetics [19].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…The applications of such power rectifiers include wireless power beaming [7], recycling power in highpower circuits [18], and ultra-fast switching integrated dc-dc converters with no magnetics [19].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The values of at which the transition between the conducting and nonconducting regions occurs are found to be (18) The dc and fundamental frequency values of the voltage and current waveforms can be found through a Fourier analysis using the transition points in (18). The first Fourier coefficient of gives the dc component of the voltage, which can be derived as (19) The fundamental frequency voltage is found from , where (20) and can be reduced to (21) Similarly, the dc component of the current waveform is found to be (22) The fundamental frequency current has and the coefficient can be shown to be equal to (23) The input power at the fundamental frequency is found from (24) Substituting (21) and (23) into the above results in (25) where is defined as (26) Solving for as a function of when is nonzero after some arithmetic results in two solutions, one of which is negative. The positive solution for the maximal current is (27) with .…”
Section: B Class-f Rectifier Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Implementations at HF and VHF bands have become common, where solutions based on the class-Φ 2 inverter may be highlighted [5] for their high-efficiency and low-voltage stress performance. At microwave frequencies, a low-power 64% efficient 4.6-GHz planar converter combining a GaAs MESFET class-E PA and a Schottky diode rectifier was demonstrated as early as 1999 [6].…”
Section: Class-e Amplifier As Power Invertermentioning
confidence: 99%