416 research outputs found

    Demonstration of Self-Powered Accelerometer Using Piezoelectric Micro-Power Generator

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    This paper demonstrates the operation of a self-power vibration measurement system. A piezoelectric material in the form of a cantilever is being used as a generator which harvest energy from ambient vibration source and transform into useful electrical output. The vibration sources is measured with a MEMS based accelerometer, which is powered up by the transformation of electrical energy derived from the mechanical vibration source itself. It has shown that at a resonant frequency of 78 Hz with an acceleration level of 1g (9.81 m/s2), the piezoelectric generator is able to produce rms output voltage of 5.20 V and successfully operating ADXL335 with the assistance of energy harvesting conditioning IC, LTC3588-1 equipped with rectifying as well as DC-to-DC step-down functions

    A Multi-Source Harvesting System Applied to Sensor-Based Smart Garments for Monitoring Workers’ Bio-Physical Parameters in Harsh Environments

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    This paper describes the development and characterization of a smart garment for monitoring the environmental and biophysical parameters of the user wearing it; the wearable application is focused on the control to workers’ conditions in dangerous workplaces in order to prevent or reduce the consequences of accidents. The smart jacket includes flexible solar panels, thermoelectric generators and flexible piezoelectric harvesters to scavenge energy from the human body, thus ensuring the energy autonomy of the employed sensors and electronic boards. The hardware and firmware optimization allowed the correct interfacing of the heart rate and SpO2 sensor, accelerometers, temperature and electrochemical gas sensors with a modified Arduino Pro mini board. The latter stores and processes the sensor data and, in the event of abnormal parameters, sends an alarm to a cloud database, allowing company managers to check them via a web app. The characterization of the harvesting subsection has shown that ≈ 265 mW maximum power can be obtained in a real scenario, whereas the power consumption due to the acquisition, processing and BLE data transmission functions determined that a 10 mAh/day charge is required to ensure the device’s proper operation. By charging a 380 mAh Lipo battery in a few hours by means of the harvesting system, an energy autonomy of 23 days was obtained, in the absence of any further energy contribution

    Functional modelling and prototyping of electronic integrated kinetic energy harvesters

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    The aim of developing infinite-life autonomous wireless electronics, powered by the energy of the surrounding environment, drives the research efforts in the field of Energy Harvesting. Electromagnetic and piezoelectric techniques are deemed to be the most attractive technologies for vibrational devices. In the thesis, both these technologies are investigated taking into account the entire energy conversion chain. In the context of the collaboration with the STMicroelectronics, the project of a self-powered Bluetooth step counter embedded in a training shoe has been carried out. A cylindrical device 27 × 16mm including the transducer, the interface circuit, the step-counter electronics and the protective shell, has been developed. Environmental energy extraction occurs exploiting the vibration of a permanent magnet in response to the impact of the shoe on the ground. A self-powered electrical interface performs maximum power transfer through optimal resistive load emulation and load decoupling. The device provides 360 ÎŒJ to the load, the 90% of the maximum recoverable energy. The energy requirement is four time less than the provided and the effectiveness of the proposed device is demonstrated also considering the foot-steps variability and the performance spread due to prototypes manufacturing. In the context of the collaboration with the G2Elab of Grenoble and STMicroelectronics, the project of a piezoelectric energy arvester has been carried out. With the aim of exploiting environmental vibrations, an uni-morph piezoelectric cantilever beam 60×25×0.5mm with a proof mass at the free-end has been designed. Numerical results show that electrical interfaces based on SECE and sSSHI techniques allows increasing performance up to the 125% and the 115% of that in case of STD interface. Due to the better performance in terms of harvested power and in terms of electric load decoupling, a self-powered SECE interface has been prototyped. In response to 2 m/s2 56,2 Hz sinusoidal input, experimental power recovery of 0.56mW is achieved demonstrating that the device is compliant with standard low-power electronics requirements

    Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting: Enhancing Power Output by Device Optimisation and Circuit Techniques

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    Energy harvesting; that is, harvesting small amounts of energy from environmental sources such as solar, air flow or vibrations using small-scale (≈1cm 3 ) devices, offers the prospect of powering portable electronic devices such as GPS receivers and mobile phones, and sensing devices used in remote applications: wireless sensor nodes, without the use of batteries. Numerous studies have shown that power densities of energy harvesting devices can be hundreds of ”W; however the literature also reveals that power requirements of many electronic devices are in the mW range. Therefore, a key challenge for the successful deployment of energy harvesting technology remains, in many cases, the provision of adequate power. This thesis aims to address this challenge by investigating two methods of enhancing the power output of a piezoelectric-based vibration energy harvesting device. Cont/d

    Study, optimization and silicon implementation of a smart high-voltage conditioning circuit for electrostatic vibration energy harvesting system

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    La rĂ©cupĂ©ration de l'Ă©nergie des vibrations est un concept relativement nouveau qui peut ĂȘtre utilisĂ© dans l'alimentation des dispositifs embarquĂ©s de puissance Ă  micro-Ă©chelle avec l'Ă©nergie des vibrations omniprĂ©sentes dans l environnement. Cette thĂšse contribue Ă  une Ă©tude gĂ©nĂ©rale des rĂ©cupĂ©rateurs de l'Ă©nergie des vibrations (REV) employant des transducteurs Ă©lectrostatiques. Un REV Ă©lectrostatique typique se compose d'un transducteur capacitif, de l'Ă©lectronique de conditionnement et d un Ă©lĂ©ment de stockage. Ce travail se concentre sur l'examen du circuit de conditionnement auto-synchrone proposĂ© en 2006 par le MIT, qui combine la pompe de charge Ă  base de diodes et le convertisseur DC-DC inductif de type de flyback qui est entraĂźnĂ© par le commutateur. Cette architecture est trĂšs prometteuse car elle Ă©limine la commande de grille prĂ©cise des transistors utilisĂ©s dans les architectures synchrones, tandis qu'un commutateur unique se met en marche rarement. Cette thĂšse propose une analyse thĂ©orique du circuit de conditionnement. Nous avons dĂ©veloppĂ© un algorithme qui par commutation appropriĂ©e de flyback implĂ©mente la stratĂ©gie de conversion d'Ă©nergie optimale en tenant compte des pertes liĂ©es Ă  la commutation. En ajoutant une fonction de calibration, le systĂšme devient adaptatif pour les fluctuations de l'environnement. Cette Ă©tude a Ă©tĂ© validĂ©e par la modĂ©lisation comportementale.Une autre contribution consiste en la rĂ©alisation de l'algorithme proposĂ© au niveau du circuit CMOS. Les difficultĂ©s majeures de conception Ă©taient liĂ©es Ă  l'exigence de haute tension et Ă  la prioritĂ© de la conception faible puissance. Nous avons conçu un contrĂŽleur du commutateur haute tension de faible puissance en utilisant la technologie AMS035HV. Sa consommation varie entre quelques centaines de nanowatts et quelques microwatts, en fonction de nombreux facteurs - paramĂštres de vibrations externes, niveaux de tension de la pompe de charge, la frĂ©quence de la commutation de commutateur, la frĂ©quence de la fonction de calibration, etc.Nous avons Ă©galement rĂ©alisĂ© en silicium, fabriquĂ© et testĂ© un commutateur Ă  haute tension avec une nouvelle architecture de l'Ă©lĂ©vateur de tension de faible puissance. En montant sur des composants discrets de la pompe de charge et du circuit de retour et en utilisant l'interrupteur conçu, nous avons caractĂ©risĂ© le fonctionnement large bande haute-tension du prototype de transducteur MEMS fabriquĂ© Ă  cĂŽtĂ© de cette thĂšse Ă  l'ESIEE Paris. Lorsque le capteur est excitĂ© par des vibrations stochastiques ayant un niveau d'accĂ©lĂ©ration de 0,8 g rms distribuĂ© dans la bande 110-170 Hz, jusqu'Ă  0,75 W de la puissance nette a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©cupĂ©rĂ©e.Vibration energy harvesting is a relatively new concept that can be used in powering micro-scale power embedded devices with the energy of vibrations omnipresent in the surrounding. This thesis contributes to a general study of vibration energy harvesters (VEHs) employing electrostatic transducers. A typical electrostatic VEH consists of a capacitive transducer, conditioning electronics and a storage element. This work is focused on investigations of the reported by MIT in 2006 auto-synchronous conditioning circuit, which combines the diode-based charge pump and the inductive flyback energy return driven by the switch. This architecture is very promising since it eliminates precise gate control of transistors employed in synchronous architectures, while a unique switch turns on rarely. This thesis addresses the theoretical analysis of the conditioning circuit. We developed an algorithm that by proper switching of the flyback allows the optimal energy conversion strategy taking into account the losses associated with the switching. By adding the calibration function, the system became adaptive to the fluctuations in the environment. This study was validated by the behavioral modeling. Another contribution consists in realization of the proposed algorithm on the circuit level. The major design difficulties were related to the high-voltage requirement and the low-power design priority. We designed a high-voltage analog controller of the switch using AMS035HV technology. Its power consumption varies between several hundred nanowatts and a few microwatts, depending on numerous factors - parameters of external vibrations, voltage levels of the charge pump, frequency of the flyback switching, frequency of calibration function, etc. We also implemented on silicon, fabricated and tested a high-voltage switch with a novel low power level-shifting driver. By mounting on discrete components the charge pump and flyback circuit and employing the proposed switch, we characterized the wideband high-voltage operation of the MEMS transducer prototype fabricated alongside this thesis in ESIEE Paris. When excited with stochastic vibrations having an acceleration level of 0.8 g rms distributed in the band 110-170 Hz, up to 0.75 ÎŒ\muW of net electrical power has been harvested.PARIS-JUSSIEU-Bib.Ă©lectronique (751059901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Vibration energy harvesters for wireless sensor networks for aircraft health monitoring

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    Traditional power supply for wireless sensor nodes is batteries. However, the application of batteries in WSN has been limited due to their large size, low capacity, limited working life, and replacement cost. With rapid advancements in microelectronics, power consumption of WSN is getting lower and hence the energy harvested from ambient may be sufficient to power the tiny sensor nodes and eliminate batteries completely. As vibration is the widespread ambient source that exists in abundance on an aircraft, a WSN node system used for aircraft health monitoring powered by a piezoelectric energy harvester was designed and manufactured. Furthermore, simulations were performed to validate the design and evaluate the performance. In addition, the Z-Stack protocol was migrated to run on the system and initial experiments were carried out to analyse the current consumption of the system. A new approach for power management was reported, the execution of the operations were determined by the amount of the energy stored on the capacitor. A novel power saving interface was also developed to minimise the power consumption during the voltage measurement

    On-chip electrochemical capacitors and piezoelectric energy harvesters for self-powering sensor nodes

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    On-chip sensing and communications in the Internet of things platform have benefited from the miniaturization of faster and low power complementary-metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) microelectronics. Micro-electromechanical systems technology (MEMS) and development of novel nanomaterials have further improved the performance of sensors and transducers while also demonstrating reduction in size and power consumption. Integration of such technologies can enable miniaturized nodes to be deployed to construct wireless sensor networks for autonomous data acquisition. Their longevity, however, is determined by the lifetime of the power supply. Traditional batteries cannot fully fulfill the demands of sensor nodes that require long operational duration. Thus, we require solutions that produce their own electricity from the surroundings and store them for future utility. Furthermore, manufacturing of such a power supply must be compatible with CMOS and MEMS technology. In this thesis, we will describe on-chip electrochemical capacitors and piezoelectric energy harvesters as components of such a self-powered sensor node. Our piezoelectric microcantilevers confirm the feasibility of fabricating micro electro-mechanical-systems (MEMS) size two-degree-of-freedom systems which can address the major issue of small bandwidth of piezoelectric micro-energy harvesters. These devices use a cut-out trapezoidal cantilever beam, limited by its footprint area i.e. a 1 cm2^2 silicon die, to enhance the stress on the cantilever\u27s free end while reducing the gap remarkably between its first two eigenfrequencies in the 400 - 500 Hz and in the 1 - 2 kHz range. The energy from the M-shaped harvesters could be stored in rGO based on-chip electrochemical capacitors. The electrochemical capacitors are manufactured through CMOS compatible, reproducible, and reliable micromachining processes such as chemical vapor deposition of carbon nanofibers (CNF) and spin coating of graphene oxide based (GO) solutions. The impact of electrode geometry and electrode thickness is studied for CNF based electrodes. Furthermore, we have also demonstrated an improvement in their electrochemical performance and yield of spin coated electrochemical capacitors through surface roughening from iron and chromium nanoparticles. The CVD grown CNF and spin coated rGO based devices are evaluated for their respective trade-offs. Finally, to improve the energy density and demonstrate the versatility of the spin coating process, we manufactured electrochemical capacitors from various GO based composites with functional groups heptadecan-9-amine and octadecanamine. The materials were used as a stack to demonstrate high energy density for spin coated electrochemical capacitors. We have also examined the possibility of integrating these devices into a power management unit to fully realize a self-powering on-chip power supply through survey of package fabrication, choice of electrolyte, and device assembly

    Towards an on-chip power supply: Integration of micro energy harvesting and storage techniques for wireless sensor networks

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    The lifetime of a power supply in a sensor node of a wireless sensor network is the decisive factor in the longevity of the system. Traditional Li-ion batteries cannot fulfill the demands of sensor networks that require a long operational duration. Thus, we require a solution that produces its own electricity from its surrounding and stores it for future utility. Moreover, as the sensor node architecture is developed on complimentary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology (CMOS), the manufacture of the power supply must be compatible with it. In this thesis, we shall describe the components of an on-chip lifetime power supply that can harvest the vibrational mechanical energy through piezoelectric microcantilevers and store it in a reduced graphene oxide (rGO) based microsupercapacitor, and that is fabricated through CMOS compatible techniques. Our piezoelectric microcantilevers confirm the feasibility of fabricating micro electro- mechanical-systems (MEMS) size two-degree-of-freedom systems which can solve the major issue of small bandwidth of piezoelectric micro-energy harvesters. These devices use a cut-out trapezoidal cantilever beam to enhance the stress on the cantilever’s free end while reducing the gap remarkably between its first two eigenfrequencies in 400 - 500 Hz and 1 - 2 kHz range. The energy from the M-shaped harvesters will be stored in rGO based microsupercapacitors. These microsupercapacitors are manufactured through a fully CMOS compatible, reproducible, and reliable micromachining processes. Furthermore, we have also demonstrated an improvement in their electrochemical performance and yield of fabrication through surface roughening from iron nanoparticles. We have also examined the possibility of integrating these devices into a power management unit to fully realize a lifetime power supply for wireless sensor networks

    Tunable unipolar synchronized electric charge extraction strategy for piezoelectric energy harvesting

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    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 Three – tier bio-implantable sensor monitoring and communications platform

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    One major hindrance to the advent of novel bio-implantable sensor technologies is the need for a reliable power source and data communications platform capable of continuously, remotely, and wirelessly monitoring deeply implantable biomedical devices. This research proposes the feasibility and potential of combining well established, ‘human-friendly' inductive and ultrasonic technologies to produce a proof-of-concept, generic, multi-tier power transfer and data communication platform suitable for low-power, periodically-activated implantable analogue bio-sensors. In the inductive sub-system presented, 5 W of power is transferred across a 10 mm gap between a single pair of 39 mm (primary) and 33 mm (secondary) circular printed spiral coils (PSCs). These are printed using an 8000 dpi resolution photoplotter and fabricated on PCB by wet-etching, to the maximum permissible density. Our ultrasonic sub-system, consisting of a single pair of Pz21 (transmitter) and Pz26 (receiver) piezoelectric PZT ceramic discs driven by low-frequency, radial/planar excitation (-31 mode), without acoustic matching layers, is also reported here for the first time. The discs are characterised by propagation tank test and directly driven by the inductively coupled power to deliver 29 ÎŒW to a receiver (implant) employing a low voltage start-up IC positioned 70 mm deep within a homogeneous liquid phantom. No batteries are used. The deep implant is thus intermittently powered every 800 ms to charge a capacitor which enables its microcontroller, operating with a 500 kHz clock, to transmit a single nibble (4 bits) of digitized sensed data over a period of ~18 ms from deep within the phantom, to the outside world. A power transfer efficiency of 83% using our prototype CMOS logic-gate IC driver is reported for the inductively coupled part of the system. Overall prototype system power consumption is 2.3 W with a total power transfer efficiency of 1% achieved across the tiers
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