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Most mains-operated equipment in use today is connected to the supply via plugs and sockets. These are generally acceptable in benign environments, but can be unsafe or have limited life in the presence of moisture. In explosive atmospheres and in undersea applications, special connectors must be used. This paper describes a technique, the contactless energy transfer system (CETS), by which electrical energy may be transmitted, without electrical connection or physical contact, through nonmagnetic media of low conductivity. The CETS, which has been used to transfer up to 5 kW across a 10 mm gap, employs high-frequency magnetic coupling and enables plug-in power connections to be made in wet or hazardous environmental conditions without the risk of electric shock, short circuiting, or sparking. Energy may be transmitted without the necessity for accurately manufactured "plug-and-socket" mechanisms and may be transmitted from source to load, even when there is relative motion. Load-source voltage matching may be made inherent to the system.
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D.A.G. Pedder
Leatherhead Food Research
A.D. Brown
Royal Holloway University of London
J.A. Skinner
TDK (United Kingdom)
IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics
University of Southampton
Lambda
ERA Software Systems (United States)
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Pedder et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a129edae407b2669635486a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/41.744372
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