156 research outputs found

    Online modelling and state-of-charge estimation for lithium-titanate battery

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    Superior safety, is a promising energy storage element for electric vehicles. Its features can be fully utilised by using a fast charger and a high performance battery management system. Battery model is vital to a battery charger design for characterising the charging behaviours of a battery. Additionally, a robust state-ofcharge (SoC) estimation should be realised for a reliable battery management. This thesis develops a battery model for charger design and a robust method for SoC estimation by using MATLAB. The thesis proposed a transfer function-based battery model which is applicable for small-signal analysis and large-signal simulation of battery charger design, in order to capture the charging profiles of LTO battery. Busse’s adaptive rule, which has simple computations, is applied to improve the accuracy of Kalman filter-based SoC estimation. Busse’s adaptive Kalman filters are also applied for SoC estimation with online battery modelling to eliminate the complicated process of battery modelling. This study was conducted by using 2.4 V, 15 Ah LTO batteries. The batteries were tested with continuous current test and pulsed current test at several ambient temperatures (-25 ÂșC, 0 ÂșC, 25 ÂșC and 50 ÂșC) and charge/discharge currents (0.5 C, 1 C, 2 C). Additionally, modified dynamic stress tests at several temperatures (-15 ÂșC, 0 ÂșC, 15 ÂșC, 25 ÂșC, 35 ÂșC and 50 ÂșC) were also performed to test the battery under real EV environment. Results of the battery modelling showed that the developed transfer function-based battery model is accurate where the root-mean-square modelling error is less than 30 mV. The results also revealed that the Busse’s adaptive rule has effectively improved the Kalman filter-based SoC estimation for the case of offline battery model by giving a higher accuracy and shorter convergence time. Additionally, Busse’s adaptive Extended Kalman Filter gave a better accuracy in SoC estimation with online battery modelling. The proposed transfer function-based battery model provides a helpful solution for the battery charger design while the proposed Busse’s adaptive Kalman filter offers an accurate and robust SoC estimation for both offline and online battery models

    Low power energy harvesting and storage techniques from ambient human powered energy sources

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    Conventional electrochemical batteries power most of the portable and wireless electronic devices that are operated by electric power. In the past few years, electrochemical batteries and energy storage devices have improved significantly. However, this progress has not been able to keep up with the development of microprocessors, memory storage, and sensors of electronic applications. Battery weight, lifespan and reliability often limit the abilities and the range of such applications of battery powered devices. These conventional devices were designed to be powered with batteries as required, but did not allow scavenging of ambient energy as a power source. In contrast, development in wireless technology and other electronic components are constantly reducing the power and energy needed by many applications. If energy requirements of electronic components decline reasonably, then ambient energy scavenging and conversion could become a viable source of power for many applications. Ambient energy sources can be then considered and used to replace batteries in some electronic applications, to minimize product maintenance and operating cost. The potential ability to satisfy overall power and energy requirements of an application using ambient energy can eliminate some constraints related to conventional power supplies. Also power scavenging may enable electronic devices to be completely self-sustaining so that battery maintenance can eventually be eliminated. Furthermore, ambient energy scavenging could extend the performance and the lifetime of the MEMS (Micro electromechanical systems) and portable electronic devices. These possibilities show that it is important to examine the effectiveness of ambient energy as a source of power. Until recently, only little use has been made of ambient energy resources, especially for wireless networks and portable power devices. Recently, researchers have performed several studies in alternative energy sources that could provide small amounts of electricity to low-power electronic devices. These studies were focused to investigate and obtain power from different energy sources, such as vibration, light, sound, airflow, heat, waste mechanical energy and temperature variations. This research studied forms of ambient energy sources such as waste mechanical (rotational) energy from hydraulic door closers, and fitness exercise bicycles, and its conversion and storage into usable electrical energy. In both of these examples of applications, hydraulic door closers and fitness exercise bicycles, human presence is required. A person has to open the door in order for the hydraulic door closer mechanism to function. Fitness exercise bicycles need somebody to cycle the pedals to generate electricity (while burning calories.) Also vibrations, body motions, and compressions from human interactions were studied using small piezoelectric fiber composites which are capable of recovering waste mechanical energy and converting it to useful electrical energy. Based on ambient energy sources, electrical energy conversion and storage circuits were designed and tested for low power electronic applications. These sources were characterized according to energy harvesting (scavenging) methods, and power and energy density. At the end of the study, the ambient energy sources were matched with possible electronic applications as a viable energy source

    Design Space Evaluation for Resonant and Hard-charged Switched Capacitor Converters

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    USB Power Delivery enables a fixed ratio converter to operate over a wider range of output voltages by varying the input voltage. Of the DC/DC step-down converters powered from this type of USB, the hard-charged Switched Capacitor circuit is of interest to industry for its potential high power density. However implementation can be limited by circuit efficiency. In fully resonant mode, the efficiency can be improved while also enabling current regulation. This expands the possible applications into battery chargers and eliminates the need for a two-stage converter.In this work, the trade-off in power loss and area between the hard-charged and fully resonant switched capacitor circuit is explored using a technique that remains agnostic to inductor technology. The loss model for each converter is presented as well as discussion on the restrained design space due to parasitics in the passive components. The results are validated experimentally using GaN-based prototype converters and the respective design spaces are analyzed

    ELECTROMECHANICAL MODELING OF A HONEYCOMB CORE INTEGRATED VIBRATION ENERGY CONVERTER WITH INCREASED SPECIFIC POWER FOR ENERGY HARVESTING APPLICATIONS

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    Innovation in integrated circuit technology along with improved manufacturing processes has resulted in considerable reduction in power consumption of electromechanical devices. Majority of these devices are currently powered by batteries. However, the issues posed by batteries, including the need for frequent battery recharge/replacement has resulted in a compelling need for alternate energy to achieve self-sufficient device operation or to supplement battery power. Vibration based energy harvesting methods through piezoelectric transduction provides with a promising potential towards replacing or supplementing battery power source. However, current piezoelectric energy harvesters generate low specific power (power-to-weight ratio) when compared to batteries that the harvesters seek to replace or supplement. In this study, the potential of integrating lightweight cellular honeycomb structures with existing piezoelectric device configurations (bimorph) to achieve higher specific power is investigated. It is shown in this study that at low excitation frequency ranges, replacing the solid continuous substrate of a conventional piezoelectric bimorph with honeycomb structures of the same material results in a significant increase in power-to-weight ratio of the piezoelectric harvester. In order to maximize the electrical response of vibration based power harvesters, the natural frequency of these harvesters is designed to match the input driving frequency. The commonly used technique of adding a tip mass is employed to lower the natural frequency (to match driving frequency) of both, solid and honeycomb substrate bimorphs. At higher excitation frequency, the natural frequency of the traditional solid substrate bimorph can only be altered (to match driving frequency) through a change in global geometric design parameters, typically achieved by increasing the thickness of the harvester. As a result, the size of the harvester is increased and can be disadvantageous especially if the application imposes a space/size constraint. Moreover, the bimorph with increased thickness will now require a larger mechanical force to deform the structure which can fall outside the input ambient excitation amplitude range. In contrast, the honeycomb core bimorph offers an advantage in terms of preserving the global geometric dimensions. The natural frequency of the honeycomb core bimorph can be altered by manipulating honeycomb cell design parameters, such as cell angle, cell wall thickness, vertical cell height and inclined cell length. This results in a change in the mass and stiffness properties of the substrate and hence the bimorph, thereby altering the natural frequency of the harvester. Design flexibility of honeycomb core bimorphs is demonstrated by varying honeycomb cell parameters to alter mass and stiffness properties for power harvesting. The influence of honeycomb cell parameters on power generation is examined to evaluate optimum design to attain highest specific power. In addition, the more compliant nature of a honeycomb core bimorph decreases susceptibility towards fatigue and can increase the operating lifetime of the harvester. The second component of this dissertation analyses an uncoupled equivalent circuit model for piezoelectric energy harvesting. Open circuit voltage developed on the piezoelectric materials can be easily computed either through analytical or finite element models. The efficacy of a method to determine power developed across a resistive load, by representing the coupled piezoelectric electromechanical problem with an external load as an open circuit voltage driven equivalent circuit, is evaluated. The lack of backward feedback at finite resistive loads resulting from such an equivalent representation is examined by comparing the equivalent circuit model to the governing equations of a fully coupled circuit model for the electromechanical problem. It is found that the backward feedback is insignificant for weakly coupled systems typically seen in micro electromechanical systems and other energy harvesting device configurations with low coupling. For moderate to high coupling systems, a correction factor based on a calibrated resistance is presented which can be used to evaluate power generation at a specific resistive load

    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

    Remote Powering and Data Communication Over a Single Inductive Link for Implantable Medical Devices

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    RÉSUMÉ Les implants mĂ©dicaux Ă©lectroniques (Implantable Medical Devices - IMDs) sont notamment utilisĂ©s pour restaurer ou amĂ©liorer des fonctions perdues de certains organes. Ils sont capables de traiter des complications qui ne peuvent pas ĂȘtre guĂ©ries avec des mĂ©dicaments ou par la chirurgie. Offrant des propriĂ©tĂ©s et des amĂ©liorations curatives sans prĂ©cĂ©dent, les IMDs sont de plus en plus demandĂ©s par les mĂ©decins et les patients. En 2017, le marchĂ© mondial des IMD Ă©tait Ă©valuĂ© Ă  15,21 milliards de dollars. D’ici 2025, il devrait atteindre 30,42 mil-liards de dollars, soutenu par un taux de croissance annuel de 9,24% selon le nouveau rapport publiĂ© par Fior Markets. Cette expansion entraĂźne une augmentation des exigences pour as-surer des performances supĂ©rieures, des fonctionnalitĂ©s supplĂ©mentaires et une durĂ©e de vie plus longue. Ces exigences ne peuvent ĂȘtre satisfaites qu’avec des techniques d’alimentation avancĂ©es, un dĂ©bit de donnĂ©es Ă©levĂ© et une Ă©lectronique miniaturisĂ©e robuste. Construire des systĂšmes capables de fournir toutes ces caractĂ©ristiques est l’objectif principal d’un grand nombre de chercheurs. Parmi plusieurs technologies sans fil, le lien inductif, qui consiste en une paire de bobines Ă  couplage magnĂ©tique, est la technique sans fil la plus largement utilisĂ©e pour le transfert de puissance et de donnĂ©es. Cela est dĂ» Ă  sa simplicitĂ©, sa sĂ©curitĂ© et sa capacitĂ© Ă  transmettre Ă  la fois de la puissance et des donnĂ©es de façon bidirectionnelle. Cependant, il existe encore un certain nombre de dĂ©fis concernant la mise en Ɠuvre d’un tel systĂšme de transfert d’énergie et de donnĂ©es sans fil (Wireless Power and Data Transfer - WPDT system). Un dĂ©fi majeur est que les exigences pour une efficacitĂ© de transfert d’énergie Ă©levĂ©e et pour une communication Ă  haut dĂ©bit sont contradictoires. En fait, la bande passante doit ĂȘtre Ă©largie pour des dĂ©bits de donnĂ©es Ă©levĂ©s, mais rĂ©duite pour une transmission efficace de l’énergie. Un autre grand dĂ©fi consiste Ă  rĂ©aliser un dĂ©modulateur fonctionnant Ă  haute vitesse avec une mise en Ɠuvre simple et une consommation d’énergie ultra-faible. Dans ce projet, nous proposons et expĂ©rimentons un nouveau systĂšme WPDT dĂ©diĂ© aux IMD permettant une communication Ă  haute vitesse et une alimentation efficace tout en maintenant une faible consommation d’énergie, une petite surface de silicium et une mise en Ɠuvre simple du rĂ©cepteur. Le systĂšme proposĂ© est basĂ© sur un nouveau schĂ©ma de modulation appelĂ© "Carrier Width Modulation (CWM)", ainsi que sur des circuits de modulation et de dĂ©modulation inĂ©dits. La modulation consiste en un coupe-circuit synchronisĂ© du rĂ©servoir LC primaire pendant un ou deux cycles en fonction des donnĂ©es transmises.----------ABSTRACT Implantable Medical Devices (IMDs) are electronic implants notably used to restore or en-hance lost organ functions. They may treat complications that cannot be cured with medica-tion or through surgery. O˙ering unprecedented healing properties and enhancements, IMDs are increasingly requested by physicians and patients. In 2017, the worldwide IMD market was valued at USD 15,21 Billion. By 2025, it is expected to attain USD 30.42 Billion sus-tained by a compound annual growth rate of 9.24% according to a recent report published by Fior Markets. This expansion is bringing-up more demand for higher performance, additional features, and longer device lifespan and autonomy. These requirements can only be achieved with advanced power sources, high-data rates, and robust miniaturized electronics. Building systems able to provide all these characteristics is the main goal of many researchers. Among several wireless technologies, the inductive link, which consists of a magnetically-coupled pair of coils, is the most widely used wireless technique for both power and data transfer. This is due to its simplicity, safety, and ability to provide simultaneously both power and bidirectional data transfer to the implant. However there are still a number of challenges regarding the implementation of such Wireless Power and Data Transfer (WPDT) systems. One main challenge is that the requirements for high Power Transfer EĂżciency (PTE) and for high-data rate communication are contra-dictory. In fact, the bandwidth needs to be widened for high data rates, but narrowed for eĂżcient power delivery. Another big challenge is to implement a high-speed demodulator with simple implementation and ultra-low power consumption. In this project, we propose and experiment a new WPDT system dedicated to IMDs allow-ing high-speed communication and eĂżcient power delivery, while maintaining a low power consumption, small silicon area, and simple implementation of the receiver. The proposed system is based on a new Carrier Width Modulation (CWM) scheme, as well as novel modu-lation and demodulation circuits. The modulation consists of a synchronized opening of the primary LC tank for one or two cycles according to the transmitted data. Unlike conventional modulation techniques, the data rate of the proposed CWM modulation is not limited by the quality factors of the primary and secondary coils. On the other hand, the proposed CWM demodulator allows higher-speed demodulation and simple implementation, unlike conven-tional demodulators for a similar modulation scheme. It also o˙ers a wide range of data rates under any selected frequency from 10 to 31 MHz

    Multi-purpose Electromagnetic Energy Harvesting System

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    This thesis proposes a multi-purpose electromagnetic energy harvesting system that harnesses mechanical energy from diverse types of mechanical motion sources and converts it into low power electrical energy. The harvested electrical energy is either used to supply power to low-power electronic devices or stored in an internal storage battery for later use. The proposed energy harvester can be i) mounted on a human’s knee, elbow, or hip, ii) hand-cranked, as well as iii) installed on any enclosure with fixed and movable parts (e.g., doors and/or windows). When mounted on a knee or hip, the device is actuated only during the so-called negative energy cycle of the motion and does not disturb the motion in the forward direction. The key building blocks of the proposed multi-purpose electromagnetic energy harvesting system is a new brushless AC electromagnetic generator, an adaptive motion translation mechanism and a smart power management system. The brushless AC generator consists of a new structure with a detachable rotor arrangement comprising mainly Neodymium rare-earth magnets mounted on an adjustable height rotor shaft and a stator made up of top and bottom flanges and a single continuous coil arrangement on a non-magnetic spool worn on a center magnetic stator core. The stator and rotor arrangement is carefully designed to allow for variable air gap so that the initial amount of torque required to move the rotor is adjustable and the amount of the generated output voltage can be controlled. Finite-element modeling magnetics (FEMM) simulation tool was used for the optimization of the new brushless generator, selecting the different generator materials, and determining the placement of the key components to achieve an efficient and truly adjustable system to the variation of frequencies and torque conditions. Furthermore, a gearbox was used as a mechanical up conversion mechanism to multiply the relatively low human motion to up to 5000 RPM at a walk pace of about one step per second. For this purpose, a three-stage spur gear system was designed using a roller-clutch at the front end to only allow motion during the negative cycle. The gearbox, when assembled together with the generator, works together with the adjustable height rotor to create the desired effect – adaptive, multi-purpose energy harvesting system. The power management design was optimized to maximum energy harvesting at rated RPM. When an external load is detected, the harvested power is routed to the external load, else, the power is routed to the internal storage battery for later use. The completed system generates between 2.5 watts and 7.5 watts of electrical power at an overall system efficiency of up to 84%

    Cascaded Converters For Integration And Management Of Grid Level Energy Storage Systems

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    ABSTRACT CASCADED CONVERTERS FOR INTEGRATION AND MANAGEMENT OF GRID-LEVEL ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS by ZUHAIR ALAAS December 2017 Advisor: Dr. Caisheng Wang Major: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Degree: Doctor of Philosophy This research work proposes two cascaded multilevel inverter structures for BESS. The gating and switching control of switching devices in both inverter typologies are done by using a phase-shifted PWM scheme. The first proposed isolated multilevel inverter is made up of three-phase six-switch inverter blocks with a reduced number of power components compared with traditional isolated CHB. The suggested isolated converter has only one battery string for three-phase system that can be used for high voltage and high power applications such as grid connected BESS and alternative energy systems. The isolated inverter enables dq frame based simple control and eliminates the issues of single-phase pulsating power, which can cause detrimental impacts on certain dc sources. Simulation studies have been carried out to compare the proposed isolated multi-level inverter with an H-bridge cascaded transformer inverter. The simulation results verified the performance of the isolated inverter. The second proposed topology is a Hierarchal Cascaded Multilevel Converter (HCMC) with phase to phase SOC balancing capability which also for high voltage and high power battery energy storage systems. The HCMC has a hybrid structure of half-bridge converters and H-bridge inverters and the voltage can be hierarchically cascaded to reach the desired value at the half-bridge and the H-bridge levels. The uniform SOC battery management is achieved by controlling the half-bridge converters that are connected to individual battery modules/cells. Simulation studies and experimental results have been carried on a large scale battery system under different operating conditions to verify the effectiveness of the proposed inverters. Moreover, this dissertation presents a new three-phase SOC equalizing circuit, called six-switch energy-level balancing circuit (SSBC), which can be used to realize uniform SOC operation for full utilization of the battery capacity in proposed HCMC or any CMI inverter while keeping balanced three-phase operation. A sinusoidal PWM modulation technique is used to control power transferring between phases. Simulation results have been carried out to verify the performance of the proposed SSBC circuit of uniform three-phase SOC balancing

    Multiphase wireless dynamic charging systems for electric vehicles

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    PhD ThesisElectric vehicles (EVs) have been intensively developed as an attempt to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions caused by fossil-fuel vehicles. EVs require expensive batteries and power electronics for charging and discharging the battery. Unfortunately, battery technology, such as lithium-ion batteries requires substantial improvements to effectively compete with fossil-fuel cars in price. Also, batteries are usually heavy, take up large space and still have range limitation. Wireless Dynamic Charging (WDC), while the vehicles are in motion, is seen as an alternative to overcome the drawbacks associated with batteries. Due to the continues charging when driving, batteries can become smaller as most of the traction energy comes from the grid directly. WDC is fundamentally developed based on inductive power transfer (IPT) technology, where a time-varying magnetic field is generated by transmitter coils, which are installed underneath the road surface, to wirelessly power receiver coils, that charge the EV’s battery continuously. Presently, there are several technical challenges associated with WDC, which hinders commercialization. The output power fluctuation along the driving direction is one of the most serious problems. These fluctuations cause reduction in constant energy transfer thus requiring larger batteries. Also, batteries lifetime is significantly reduced as a result of increasing internal heating. Several studies attempted to realise constant output power for WDC. However, proposed methods so far, have disadvantages such as high cost, complexity or unable to sustain constant output power throughout the charging process. The work in this thesis proposes a multiphase WDC system to simultaneously achieve constant and high output power for EV applications. The proposed WDC system utilizes multiple primary windings that guarantee a homogeneous mutual magnetic flux for the receiver along the driving direction. This results in a constant induced voltage across the receiver and hence constant output power to charge the EV battery. High output power capability is attained by using multiple transmitter windings arranged in a novel winding method. The effectiveness of the proposed system is analytically described, simulated and demonstrated experimentally using a 3-kW laboratory prototype with the three-phase transmitter. The proposed system requires only simple control, eliminates communications between the primary and secondary sides and delivers 125% higher power transfer capability compared to conventional single-phase WDC systems
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