25 research outputs found
Analysis on One-Stage SSHC Rectifier for Piezoelectric Vibration Energy Harvesting
Conventional SSHI (synchronized switch harvesting on inductor) has been
believed to be one of the most efficient interface circuits for piezoelectric
vibration energy harvesting systems. It employs an inductor and the resulting
RLC loop to synchronously invert the charge across the piezoelectric material
to avoid charge and energy loss due to charging its internal capacitor ().
The performance of the SSHI circuit greatly depends on the inductor and a large
inductor is often needed; hence significantly increases the volume of the
system. An efficient interface circuit using a synchronous charge inversion
technique, named as SSHC, was proposed recently. The SSHC rectifier utilizes
capacitors, instead of inductors, to flip the voltage across the harvester. For
a one-stage SSHC rectifier, one single intermediate capacitor () is
employed to temporarily store charge flowed from and inversely charge
to perform the charge inversion. In previous studies, the voltage flip
efficiency achieves 1/3 when . This paper presents that the voltage
flip efficiency can be further increased to approach 1/2 if is chosen to
be much larger than
Simulation and performance analysis of self-powered piezoelectric energy harvesting system for low power applications
Energy harvesting is a process of extracting energy from surrounding environments. The extracted energy is stored in the supply power for various applications like wearable, wireless sensor, and internet of thing (IoT) applications. The electricity generation using conventional approaches is very costly and causes more pollution in the environmental surroundings. In this manuscript, an energy-efficient, self-powered battery-less piezoelectric-based energy harvester (PE-EH) system is modeled using maximum power point tracking (MPPT) module. The MPPT is used to track the optimal voltage generated by the piezoelectric (PE) sensor and stored across the capacitor. The proposed PE system is self-operated without additional microarchitecture to harvest the Power. The experimental simulation results for the overall PE-EH systems are analyzed for different frequency ranges with variable input source vibrations. The optimal voltage storage across the storing capacitor varies from 1.12 to 1.6 V. The PE-EH system can harvest power up to 86 µW without using any voltage source and is suitable for low-power applications. The proposed PE-EH module is compared with the existing similar EH system with better improvement in harvested power
Energy harvesting technologies for structural health monitoring of airplane components - a review
With the aim of increasing the efficiency of maintenance and fuel usage in airplanes, structural health monitoring (SHM) of critical composite structures is increasingly expected and required. The optimized usage of this concept is subject of intensive work in the framework of the EU COST Action CA18203 "Optimising Design for Inspection" (ODIN). In this context, a thorough review of a broad range of energy harvesting (EH) technologies to be potentially used as power sources for the acoustic emission and guided wave propagation sensors of the considered SHM systems, as well as for the respective data elaboration and wireless communication modules, is provided in this work. EH devices based on the usage of kinetic energy, thermal gradients, solar radiation, airflow, and other viable energy sources, proposed so far in the literature, are thus described with a critical review of the respective specific power levels, of their potential placement on airplanes, as well as the consequently necessary power management architectures. The guidelines provided for the selection of the most appropriate EH and power management technologies create the preconditions to develop a new class of autonomous sensor nodes for the in-process, non-destructive SHM of airplane components.The work of S. Zelenika, P. Gljušcic, E. Kamenar and Ž. Vrcan is partly enabled by using
the equipment funded via the EU European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) project no. RC.2.2.06-0001:
“Research Infrastructure for Campus-based Laboratories at the University of Rijeka (RISK)” and partly supported
by the University of Rijeka, Croatia, project uniri-tehnic-18-32 „Advanced mechatronics devices for smart
technological solutions“. Z. Hadas, P. Tofel and O. Ševecek acknowledge the support provided via the Czech
Science Foundation project GA19-17457S „Manufacturing and analysis of flexible piezoelectric layers for smart
engineering”. J. Hlinka, F. Ksica and O. Rubes gratefully acknowledge the financial support provided by the
ESIF, EU Operational Programme Research, Development and Education within the research project Center of
Advanced Aerospace Technology (Reg. No.: CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000826) at the Faculty of Mechanical
Engineering, Brno University of Technology. V. Pakrashi would like to acknowledge UCD Energy Institute, Marine
and Renewable Energy Ireland (MaREI) centre Ireland, Strengthening Infrastructure Risk Assessment in the
Atlantic Area (SIRMA) Grant No. EAPA\826/2018, EU INTERREG Atlantic Area and Aquaculture Operations with
Reliable Flexible Shielding Technologies for Prevention of Infestation in Offshore and Coastal Areas (FLEXAQUA),
MarTera Era-Net cofund PBA/BIO/18/02 projects. The work of J.P.B. Silva is partially supported by the Portuguese
Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) in the framework of the Strategic Funding UIDB/FIS/04650/2020.
M. Mrlik gratefully acknowledges the support of the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech
Republic-DKRVO (RP/CPS/2020/003
Tunable unipolar synchronized electric charge extraction strategy for piezoelectric energy harvesting
International audienceThis article focuses on an intelligent control strategy to improve the performances of shunt-rectifier architectures for vibration energy harvesting. It demonstrates how proper tuning can improve the frequency bandwidth and maximum power of unipolar synchronized electric charge extraction architectures. For resonators with strong enough coupling (k 2 Q. p=2), tuning the duration of charge extraction with the oscillation frequency improves the power harvesting performances. The main differences with other similar solutions such as unipolar synchronized electric charge extraction without tuning strategy or tunable synchronized electric charge extraction are illustrated. In particular, we show how the choice of the shunt rectifier significantly affects the power response of the generator due to electromechanical coupling phenomenon. The analytical study is experimentally validated on a cantilever-based piezoelectric generator
A Fully Integrated Split-Electrode SSHC Rectifier for Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting
In order to efficiently extract power from piezoelectric
vibration energy harvesters, various active rectifiers have
been proposed in the past decade, which include Synchronized
Switch Harvesting on Inductor (SSHI), Synchronous Electric
Charge Extraction (SECE), etc. Although reported active rectifiers
show good performance improvements compared to fullbridge
rectifiers (FBR), large off-chip inductors are typically
required and the system volume is inevitably increased as a
result, counter to the requirement for system miniaturization. In
this paper, a fully-integrated split-electrode SSHC (synchronized
switch harvesting on capacitors) rectifier is proposed, which
achieves significant performance enhancement without employing
any off-chip components. The proposed circuit is designed and
fabricated in a 0:18 ÎĽm CMOS process and it is co-integrated with
a custom MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) piezoelectric
transducer with its electrode layer equally split into four regions.
The measured results show that the proposed rectifier can provide
up to 8.2 and 5.2 boost, using on-chip and off-chip diodes
respectively, in harvested power compared to a FBR under low
excitation levels and the peak rectified output power achieves
186 ÎĽW
Energy Harvesting for Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems
Tire pressure monitoring systems (TPMSs) predict over- and underinflated tires, and warn the driver in critical situations. Today, battery powered TPMSs suffer from limited energy. New sensor features such as friction determination or aquaplaning detection require even more energy and would significantly decrease the TPMS lifetime.
Harvesting electrical energy inside the tire of a vehicle has been considered as a promising alternative to overcome the limited lifetime of a battery. However, it is a real challenge to design a system, that generates electrical energy at low velocities while being robust at 200 km/h where radial accelerations up to 20000 m/s2 occur.
This work focusses on developing different electromechanical energy transducers that meet the high requirements of the automotive sector. Different approaches are addressed on how the change of acceleration and strain within the tire can be used to provide mechanical energy to the energy harvester. The energy harvester converts the mechanical energy into electrical energy. In this thesis, piezoelectric and electromagnetic transducers are discussed in depth, modelled as electromechanical networks.
Since the transducers provide energy in the form of an AC voltage, but sensors require a DC voltage, various common interface circuits are compared, using LTspice and applying method of the stochastic signal analysis. Furthermore, a buck-boost converter concept for the electromagnetic energy harvester is optimized and improved.
Experiments on a tire test rig validate the theoretically determined output and confirm that well designed energy harvesters in the tire can generate much more energy than required by an TPMS not only at high velocities but also at velocities as low as 20 km/h
Toward Small-Scale Wind Energy Harvesting: Design, Enhancement, Performance Comparison, and Applicability
© 2017 Liya Zhao and Yaowen Yang. The concept of harvesting ambient energy as an alternative power supply for electronic systems like remote sensors to avoid replacement of depleted batteries has been enthusiastically investigated over the past few years. Wind energy is a potential power source which is ubiquitous in both indoor and outdoor environments. The increasing research interests have resulted in numerous techniques on small-scale wind energy harvesting, and a rigorous and quantitative comparison is necessary to provide the academic community a guideline. This paper reviews the recent advances on various wind power harvesting techniques ranging between cm-scaled wind turbines and windmills, harvesters based on aeroelasticities, and those based on turbulence and other types of working principles, mainly from a quantitative perspective. The merits, weaknesses, and applicability of different prototypes are discussed in detail. Also, efficiency enhancing methods are summarized from two aspects, that is, structural modification aspect and interface circuit improvement aspect. Studies on integrating wind energy harvesters with wireless sensors for potential practical uses are also reviewed. The purpose of this paper is to provide useful guidance to researchers from various disciplines interested in small-scale wind energy harvesting and help them build a quantitative understanding of this technique
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Energy-efficient Interfaces for Vibration Energy Harvesting
Ultra low power wireless sensors and sensor systems are of increasing interest in a variety of applications ranging from structural health monitoring to industrial process control. Electrochemical batteries have thus far remained the primary energy sources for such systems despite the finite associated lifetimes imposed due to limitations associated with energy density. However, certain applications (such as implantable biomedical electronic devices and tire pressure sensors) require the operation of sensors and sensor systems over significant periods of time, where battery usage may be impractical and add cost due to the requirement for periodic re-charging and/or replacement. In order to address this challenge and extend the operational lifetime of wireless sensors, there has been an emerging research interest on harvesting ambient vibration energy.
Vibration energy harvesting is a technology that generates electrical energy from ambient kinetic energy. Despite numerous research publications in this field over the past decade, low power density and variable ambient conditions remain as the key limitations of vibration energy harvesting. In terms of the piezoelectric transducers, the open-circuit voltage is usually low, which limits its power while extracted by a full-bridge rectifier. In terms of the interface circuits, most reported circuits are limited by the power efficiency, suitability to real-world vibration conditions and system volume due to large off-chip components required.
The research reported in this thesis is focused on increasing power output of piezoelectric transducers and power extraction efficiency of interface circuits. There are five main chapters describing two new design topologies of piezoelectric transducers and three novel active interface circuits implemented with CMOS technology. In order to improve the power output of a piezoelectric transducer, a series connection configuration scheme is proposed, which splits the electrode of a harvester into multiple equal regions connected in series to inherently increase the open-circuit voltage generated by the harvester. This topology passively increases the rectified power while using a full-bridge rectifier. While most of piezoelectric transducers are designed with piezoelectric layers fully covered by electrodes, this thesis proposes a new electrode design topology, which maximizes the raw AC output power of a piezoelectric harvester by finding an optimal electrode coverage.
In order to extract power from a piezoelectric harvester, three active interface circuits are proposed in this thesis. The first one improves the conventional SSHI (synchronized switch harvesting on inductor) by employing a startup circuitry to enable the system to start operating under much lower vibration excitation levels. The second one dynamically configures the connection of the two regions of a piezoelectric transducer to increase the operational range and output power under a variety of excitation levels. The third one is a novel SSH architecture which employs capacitors instead of inductors to perform synchronous voltage flip. This new architecture is named as SSHC (synchronized switch harvesting on capacitors) to distinguish from SSHI rectifiers and indicate its inductorless architecture
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An Inductorless Bias-Flip Rectifier for Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting
Piezoelectric vibration energy harvesters have drawn much interest for powering self-sustained electronic devices. Furthermore, the continuous push toward miniaturization and higher levels of integration continues to form key drivers for autonomous sensor systems being developed as parts of the emerging Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm. The synchronized switch harvesting (SSH) on inductor and synchronous electrical charge extraction are two of the most efficient interface circuits for piezoelectric energy harvesters; however, inductors are indispensable components in these interfaces. The required inductor values can be up to 10 mH to achieve high efficiencies, which significantly increase overall system volume, counter to the requirement for miniaturized self-power systems for IoT. An inductorless bias-flip rectifier is proposed in this paper to perform residual charge inversion using capacitors instead of inductors. The voltage flip efficiency goes up to 80% while eight switched capacitors are employed. The proposed SSH on capacitors circuit is designed and fabricated in a 0.35-ÎĽm CMOS process. The performance is experimentally measured and it shows a 9.7x performance improvement compared with a full-bridge rectifier for the case of a 2.5-V open-circuit zero-peak voltage amplitude generated by the piezoelectric harvester. This performance improvement is higher than most of the reported state-of-the-art inductor-based interface circuits, while the proposed circuit has a significantly smaller overall volume enabling system miniaturization.EPSRC (Grant number: EP/L010917/1