Qi2 Wireless Charging: Inductors, Capacitors and EMC Filters

Qi2 wireless power is pushing classic power‑electronics issues—EMC, magnetics and filter design—into very compact, consumer‑grade hardware. This Würth Elektronik webinar walks through a complete Qi2 transmitter design, from system architecture to conducted and radiated EMC optimization, and offers several concrete lessons for selecting and applying passive components in modern wireless chargers.

Introduction

The Würth Elektronik webinar presented design implementation of a Qi2 magnetic power profile (MPP) transmitter based on a USB‑C input, buck‑boost stage, full‑bridge resonant inverter and a standardized Qi2 transmitter coil with integrated magnetics. The focus of the webinar is not only on achieving functional power transfer but also on meeting CISPR 32‑class EMC limits through systematic LC filter design on all interface lines. Along the way, the speakers highlight why inductors, capacitors, ferrites and PCB layout decisions make the difference between a clean, compliant design and a complete EMC failure.

System overview and key building blocks

The transmitter system follows the Qi2 standard functional diagram: a variable DC supply, resonant inverter and primary coil, plus ASK/FSK communication and an authentication path. In the Würth Elektronik demo, these blocks are implemented around Infineon’s WLC1115 wireless charging controller (now obsolete) and a dedicated Qi2 transmitter coil module.

Main functional blocks

Obsolescence caveat

After the design work, Infineon discontinued all of its wireless charging ICs and exited the wireless power business, so the exact controller and originally planned reference layout are no longer available from the manufacturer. For practical design‑in, engineers should treat this as a case study in architecture and EMC/filter design rather than a drop‑in reference and select a currently supported Qi2/Qi1 controller from vendors such as NXP, Microchip, Texas Instruments or Analog Devices according to their datasheets.

Qi2 transmitter coil and magnetic design

The Qi2 transmitter coil module is the centerpiece of the system and is strongly defined by the Qi2 magnetic power profile. In the Würth module, the coil is integrated with several magnetic and mechanical elements that directly impact coupling, efficiency and EMC.

Coil module construction

These elements are standardized in Qi2, so the coil vendor’s module can be integrated without redesigning the magnetic stack‑up, provided the mechanical constraints are respected.

Resonant tank and power profiles

The WLC1115 and Qi2 system use a switchable resonant capacitance to support both Qi2 MPP and backward compatibility with Qi1 baseline devices.

In practice, this means the design must maintain the LC resonant frequency within allowed tolerances despite capacitor tolerance and coil inductance variation. According to the presenters, the Qi2 standard’s allowed frequency range and the standardized coil definition absorb the typical component spreads, provided quality capacitors and coils are used.

Key features and benefits of the passive component choices

Buck‑boost converter passives

The integrated buck‑boost stage has to cover a wide input range and regulate a similarly wide output window, which drives the selection of inductors and capacitors around it.

The presenters do not go deep into the buck‑boost inductor and capacitor selection, but the EMC results clearly show that residual switching ripple at around 360 kHz propagates along the supply cables if not filtered properly.

Resonant tank and snubber capacitors

The full‑bridge inverter drives the resonant tank and the Qi2 coil, with two main capacitor groups:

Qi2 places implicit limits on frequency deviation; the webinar confirms that standard tolerances and Qi2’s allowed range make the design robust to realistic spreads, but this is only true if high‑quality capacitors and a well‑controlled coil are used.

ASK demodulation path passives

The ASK demodulator uses three possible measurement paths: current at the buck‑boost output, coil voltage via a peak‑hold circuit, or a phase‑demodulation path, followed by low‑pass filtering, AC amplification and a final comparator.

The presenters highlight that the demodulated signal has very small amplitude and needs careful amplification and filtering to reconstruct a clean digital bit stream for the controller. For design engineers, this is a reminder that “non‑power” capacitors and resistors in the communication path are just as critical as the high‑power tank components.

EMC measurements: conducted emissions and line filters

The EMC part of the webinar takes place directly in Würth’s EMC lab and uses CISPR 16 measurement setups with CISPR 32 limit lines for commercial environments. This provides a concrete example of how unfiltered converter noise couples onto cables and how systematic LC filtering improves the situation.

Baseline conducted emissions

The 360 kHz fundamental and its harmonics approach or exceed the CISPR 32 limit lines, showing that the initial design would not pass conducted EMC once loaded.

LC filter design on VCC and CC lines

To mitigate the 360 kHz differential‑mode noise, the engineer adds LC filters directly at the transmitter side:

From this, they infer that a significant portion of the noise is escaping on the unfiltered CC (configuration/control) line, which presents a lower impedance path than the filtered VCC line.

Adding a second LC filter with the same component values to the CC line yields much better results:

Finally, they add a 2.2 µH inductor in the ground line as well, close to the transmitter:

Lessons for passive component selection

The presenters explicitly warn that filter effectiveness is not just a question of schematic but also of layout quality and grounding.

Radiated emissions and cable/line strategies

After optimizing conducted emissions, the team moves into the absorber chamber to test radiated emissions up to 1 GHz (with additional observation up to 6 GHz), again using CISPR 16/32 setups.

Filtered vs. unfiltered radiated performance

With LC filters on VCC and CC and an inductor in ground:

Without filtering:

The presence of a 2.45 GHz peak from the phone’s Wi‑Fi is noted but correctly ignored for the charger EMC result, as it is not part of the EUT emissions.

Comments on cable twisting and shielding

In the Q&A, the speakers address typical mitigation ideas:

The clear message for passive‑component‑oriented readers is that common‑mode hardware (e.g., cable twisting, shields, common‑mode chokes) must be matched to the dominant noise mechanism; in this design, low‑frequency differential‑mode filtering with discrete LC sections is essential.

Design‑in notes for engineers

Although the specific WLC1115 controller is obsolete, the passive‑component and EMC lessons generalize well to other Qi2 and wireless power designs.

Selecting inductors and capacitors for line filtering

Integrating the Qi2 coil module

Layout and EMC best practices

Controller and ecosystem considerations

Given Infineon’s exit from wireless power, designers should:

Typical applications

Qi2 transmitters with this kind of architecture and EMC profile naturally target consumer and small industrial applications, where standardized coils and strong EMC requirements intersect.

Typical use cases include:

In all of these, the same combination of a wide‑range input, high‑frequency resonant inverter, Qi2‑compatible coil and carefully designed LC filters on all external lines will recur, making the passive‑component insights from this webinar broadly reusable.

Conclusion

The Würth Elektronik Qi2 transmitter demo shows that the success or failure of a wireless charger design often hinges on “ordinary” passive components: inductors and capacitors in the resonant tank, LC filters on supply and control lines, and the standardized coil and ferrite stack‑up. Even with a capable controller IC, unfiltered 360 kHz differential‑mode noise will push conducted and radiated emissions over CISPR 32 limits, while properly dimensioned and placed LC sections on VCC, CC and ground can restore comfortable EMC margins.

For designers and purchasing engineers, the key is to treat these passives as design‑critical components: specify inductors and capacitors with suitable electrical characteristics, temperature behavior and mechanical robustness, and validate their effect in the actual EMC lab setup rather than relying solely on schematic‑level estimates. While the exact controller used in the webinar is obsolete, the architecture and EMC/filtering approach provide a valuable reference for implementing Qi2 wireless power systems with a strong focus on passive‑component performance.

Source

The information in this article is based on a Würth Elektronik webinar demonstrating the design and EMC optimization of a Qi2 wireless power transmitter, including live measurements in their EMC chambers and a Q&A session with the design and field application engineers.youtube

References

  1. Designing Qi2 Wireless Power Systems: Practical Development and EMC Optimization – Würth Elektronik Group (YouTube)
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