I'm developing a product which has body-worn wireless sensors. It's very convenient to use wireless charging for these as it's possible to encapsulate them in a sealing package with no need for connectors (the sensor design is such that it needs to be airtight, not just showerproof).
Previously, I was using Qi receivers intended as aftermarket upgrades for phones, and low cost wireless power transmitters. These worked pretty well - I only need a small battery so they charge quickly. The only irritating factor was that the rx/tx distance needed to be short and the devices well aligned, or they didn't charge.
Recently, Qi2 chargers have become very widely and cheaply available, and they tend to be the default. I have not yet moved away from the aftermarket receivers although I probably will do as they're quite big and smaller options are becoming readily
available. But my typical setup at the moment is a Qi2 transmitter and a Qi receiver having no magsafe-style alignment magnet
.
I am seeing problems with the sensors overheating whilst on charge, with the transmitter current consumption going up to 2A even though the battery current is only 100mA. The inefficiencies of the wireless coupling are such that I'd expect the transmitter to take no more than 250mA.
I believe the problem is that the Qi2 transmitters are capable of putting out more power to compensate for suboptimal coupling, but when they do this they get hot. This then heats up the sensor. I haven't yet proved that the sensor doesn't generate heat or overcharges the battery but I don't think so. The mechanism seems to be that the transmitter grills the sensor.
It's also possible that the reason for the poor coupling is that some other element of the system is absorbing power from the magnetic coupling. Quite early wireless charging designs used smart power control to avoid just building an inductive heater but compensating for poor coupling that is really due to an adjacent 'shorted turn' may be an issue.
Trying to find out how to stop this lipo-frying effect, I find many people complaining of their phones overheating due to wireless charging. It's apparently a growing problem and may point to a screwup by Qi or common implementations that get it badly wrong. These seem to particularly involve built-in chargers from large automotive manufacturers. I can imagine it becoming a very visible problem when it causes a car fire.
Is anybody else struggling with this problem ? I'd like to find app notes, recommendations etc. Perhaps a thermal cutout that stops the receiver maintaining transmission if it gets too hot. Maybe modern receivers have this built in whilst older Qi receivers don't. If so, the backwards compatibility has a rather major flaw.