Wow, someone wrote a book about inductive power transfer in biomed. We had to do it from scratch back when ;')
Hikaru pointed out something important. At steady state, the series resistor, R, doesn't make a difference. However, there are a few requirements for this to be true:
1. The system must be at resonance - deviation will result in losses
2. The system cannot supply power to a load
3. The assumption is only valid during steady state operation - step changes in source excitation will result in temporary losses as the tank voltage adjusts to the source voltage.
Regarding the biomedical power transfer, I used to design these for a little company starting with A, ending in S and having only one additional letter ;)
The difficulty is sending power through people is that you have very little mutual inductance with reasonable diameter coils and seperations on the order of an inch or more. You start with a great many amp turns on the primary to ensure that you get sufficeint magnetization within the secondary. Then, the secondary has significant series inductance that acts as a series impedance with the incoming signal. Thus, you end up with parallel tuning on each side.
On the primary side, the turns of the primary inductor resonate with a parallel low loss capacitor such that high currents are maintained in the winding. Without the resonance, such high currents must travel through the driving circuitry, and the loss is high.
On the secondary side, the reactive impedance of the self inductance can be "tuned out" with a corresponding amount of capacitance reactance. In reality, the capacitance is never ideal because the coil to coil coupling varies from patient to patient and run to run.
Typically, the load capacitance is chosen for a somewhat worst case. If the coils are separated a slight bit beyond this, the power transfer drops off rapidly. If the coils are brought closer together, the capacitance value is again wrong and the capability to transfer power is less than it could have been simply because the capacitance loading.