39 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
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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
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-μm 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
A Cold-Startup SSHI Rectifier for Piezoelectric Energy Harvesters with Increased Open-Circuit Voltage
Piezoelectric vibration energy harvesting has drawn much research interest over the last decade towards the goal of enabling self-sustained wireless sensor nodes. In order to make use of the harvested energy, interface circuits are needed to rectify and manage the energy. Among all active interface circuits, SSHI (synchronized switch harvesting on inductor) and SECE (synchronous electric charge extraction) are widely employed due to their high energy efficiencies. However, the cold-startup issue still remains since an interface circuit needs a stable DC supply and the whole system is completely out of charge at the beginning of implementations or after a certain period of time without input vibration excitation. In this paper, a new cold-startup SSHI interface circuit is presented, which dynamically increases the open-circuit voltage generated from the piezoelectric transducer (PT) in cold-state to start the system under much lower excitation levels. The proposed circuit is designed and fabricated in a 0.18 um CMOS process and experimentally validated together with a custom MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) harvester, which is designed with split electrodes to work with the proposed power extraction circuit. The experiments were performed to start the system from the cold state under variable excitation levels. The results show that the proposed system lowers the required excitation level by at least 50% in order to perform a cold-startup. This aids restarting of the energy harvesting system under low excitation levels each time it enters the cold state
In-Body Energy Harvesting Power Management Interface for Post Heart Transplantation Monitoring
Deep tissue energy harvesters are of increasing interest in the development of battery-less implantable devices. This paper presents a fully integrated ultra-low quiescent power management interface. It has power optimization and impedance matching between a piezoelectric energy harvester and the functional load that could be potentially powered by the heart's mechanical motions. The circuit has been designed in 0.18-µm CMOS technology. It dissipates 189.8 nW providing two voltage outputs of 1.4 V and 4.2 V. The simulation results show an output power 8.2x times of an ideal full-bridge rectifier without an external power supply. The design has the potential for use in self-powered heart implantable devices as it is capable providing stable output voltages from a cold startup
Design of a low-voltage CMOS RF receiver for energy harvesting sensor node
In this thesis a CMOS low-power and low-voltage RF receiver front-end is presented.
The main objective is to design this RF receiver so that it can be powered by a piezoelectric
energy harvesting power source, included in a Wireless Sensor Node application. For
this type of applications the major requirements are: the low-power and low-voltage
operation, the reduced area and cost and the simplicity of the architecture. The system
key blocks are the LNA and the mixer, which are studied and optimized with greater
detail, achieving a good linearity, a wideband operation and a reduced introduction of
noise.
A wideband balun LNA with noise and distortion cancelling is designed to work at
a 0.6 V supply voltage, in conjunction with a double-balanced passive mixer and subsequent
TIA block. The passive mixer operates in current mode, allowing a minimal
introduction of voltage noise and a good linearity.
The receiver analog front-end has a total voltage conversion gain of 31.5 dB, a 0.1 -
4.3 GHz bandwidth, an IIP3 value of -1.35 dBm, and a noise figure lower than 9 dB. The
total power consumption is 1.9 mW and the die area is 305x134.5 m2, using a standard
130 nm CMOS technology
A piezoelectric based energy harvester interface for a CMOS wireless sensor IC
In this thesis a piezoelectric energy harvesting system, responsible for regulating the power output of a piezoelectric transducer subjected to ambient vibration, is designed to power an RF receiver with a 6 mW power consump-tion. The electrical characterisation of the chosen piezoelectric transducer is the starting point of the design, which subsequently presents a full-bridge cross-coupled rectifier that rectifies the AC output of the transducer and a low-dropout regulator responsible for delivering a constant voltage system output of 0.6 V, with low voltage ripple, which represents the receiver’s required sup-ply voltage. The circuit is designed using CMOS 130 nm UMC technology, and the system presents an inductorless architecture, with reduced area and cost. The electrical simulations run for the complete circuit lead to the conclusion that the proposed piezoelectric energy harvesting system is a plausible solution to power the RF receiver, provided that the chosen transducer is subjected to moderate levels of vibration
Threshold voltage control to improve energy utilization efficiency of a power management circuit for energy harvesting applications
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from MDPI via the DOI in this record.Eurosensors 2018 Conference, 19-12 September 2018, Graz, AustriaThis work presents a design approach that improves power management circuit (PMC)
for energy harvesting applications so that more of the harvested energy can be utilized by the
wireless sensor nodes (WSNs) to perform useful tasks. The proposed method is widely applicable
to different circuits by setting an appropriate threshold voltage at the energy flow control interface
of the circuit. Experimental results show that with a threshold voltage difference of around 20 mV,
the energy output from the PMC can differ by more than 5%. This difference is significant over a
long period of time as more tasks can be performed by the WSN with the extra energy.This work has been partly supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council, U.K., through the project En-ComE under Grant EP/K020331/1 and Innovate UK through the project
Multi-source power management to enable autonomous micro energy harvesting systems
An Efficient Inductorless Dynamically Configured Interface Circuit for Piezoelectric Vibration Energy Harvesting
Vibration energy harvesting based on piezoelectric materials is of interest in several applications such as in powering remote distributed wireless sensor nodes for structural health monitoring. Synchronized switch harvesting on inductor and synchronous electric charge extraction circuits show good power efficiency among reported power management circuits; however, limitations exist due to inductors employed, adaption of response to varying excitation levels, and the synchronized switch damping (SSD) effect. In this paper, an inductorless dynamically configured interface circuit is proposed, which is able to configure the connection of two piezoelectric materials in parallel or in series by periodically evaluating the ambient excitation level. The proposed circuit is designed and fabricated in a 0.35 μHV CMOS process.The fabricated circuit is cointegrated with a piezoelectric bimorph energy harvester and the performance is experimentally validated. With a low power consumption (0.5 μW), the measured results show that the proposed rectifier can provide a 4.5 × boost in harvested energy compared to the conventional full-bridge rectifier without employing an inductor. It also shows a high power efficiency over a wide range of excitation levels and is less susceptible to SSD.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research CouncilThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IEEE via http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TPEL.2016.258775
Power Management Circuits for Energy Harvesting Applications
Energy harvesting is the process of converting ambient available energy into usable electrical energy. Multiple types of sources are can be used to harness environmental energy: solar cells, kinetic transducers, thermal energy, and electromagnetic waves.
This dissertation proposal focuses on the design of high efficiency, ultra-low power, power management units for DC energy harvesting sources. New architectures and design techniques are introduced to achieve high efficiency and performance while achieving maximum power extraction from the sources. The first part of the dissertation focuses on the application of inductive switching regulators and their use in energy harvesting applications. The second implements capacitive switching regulators to minimize the use of external components and present a minimal footprint solution for energy harvesting power management. Analysis and theoretical background for all switching regulators and linear regulators are described in detail.
Both solutions demonstrate how low power, high efficiency design allows for a self-sustaining, operational device which can tackle the two main concerns for energy harvesting: maximum power extraction and voltage regulation. Furthermore, a practical demonstration with an Internet of Things type node is tested and positive results shown by a fully powered device from harvested energy. All systems were designed, implemented and tested to demonstrate proof-of-concept prototypes