Electronics

TI’s bqTESLA wireless charging development kit helps designers cut the cord on portable devices

TI’s bqTESLA wireless charging development kit helps designers cut the cord on portable devices
The TI bqTESLA wireless charging development kit lets designers integrate wireless power technology into portable electronics
The TI bqTESLA wireless charging development kit lets designers integrate wireless power technology into portable electronics
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The TI bqTESLA kit includes both the transmitter and receiver elements
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The TI bqTESLA kit includes both the transmitter and receiver elements
The TI bqTESLA wireless charging development kit lets designers integrate wireless power technology into portable electronics
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The TI bqTESLA wireless charging development kit lets designers integrate wireless power technology into portable electronics

Between Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and the latest-gen cell phone networks, we hardly ever have to plug anything into our mobile devices these days. That is, until the batteries die. Then, we’re rooting through a rat’s nest of USB cables and adapters trying to find the right wall wart and a plug that fits the charging port. Clearly wireless charging’s day has arrived, and Texas Instruments has released the industry’s first Qi-certified wireless power development kit. The bqTESLA kit is meant to help design engineers integrate wireless power technology into devices such as smartphones, digital cameras, and MP3 players.

Wireless power uses near-field magnetic induction to transfer power from a charging base station to a portable device (an alternate technology from Fujitsu uses magnetic resonance). With magnetic induction, a transmitter coil in the charging pad sends power over distances of a few centimeters to a receiver coil embedded in the device. In the charging base station, a power conversion unit converts electrical power to a wireless power signal. At the receiver, the power pickup unit converts the wireless power signal back to electrical power to charge the device’s battery. The transmitter and receiver communicate with each other to control the charging process. A base station can have more than one transmitter to charge more than one device.

Several wireless power solutions are on the market, such as the PowerDisc and the Powermat. However, because most portable devices do not have built-in wireless power receivers, these systems require proprietary adapters for charging. The Wireless Power Consortium (WPC) has defined the Qi specification to promote standardization among wireless power systems.

The TI bqTESLA kit includes both the transmitter and receiver elements
The TI bqTESLA kit includes both the transmitter and receiver elements

The Qi standard (pronounced “chee” and taken from the Chinese concept of “vital energy”) defines the interoperability between wireless power transmitters and power receivers. The Qi low-power standard provides up to 5 Watts for wireless power receivers, which meets the needs of most portable consumer devices that use USB charging. Under the WPC standard, Qi-compliant devices will work with any Qi-compliant chargers.

With the bqTESLA development kit, which TI announced at last year’s CES show, TI aims to help designers integrate Qi-compliant wireless power technology into portable consumer electronic devices as well as infrastructure applications such as furniture and cars. The TI bqTESLA development kit is now available, and includes a single-channel transmitter, a direct-charge receiver, and associated magnetics for applications that require 5 Watts of power or less. TI says no additional software development is required to implement the kit.

The main components of the TI bqTESLA development kit include:

  • The bq500110EVM-688 single-channel transmitter evaluation module
  • The bq25046EVM-687 receiver-side evaluation module
  • The MSP430bq1010 wireless power receiver control and communications unit

The TI bqTESLA development kit is in production and available now at US$500. The individual components of the kit are also available for purchase in production quantities. Check Texas Instruments for more information.

2 comments
2 comments
Facebook User
I daresay Tesla would be proud.
Kirill Belousov
I love that piece! What marks of cellular phones is this supports?