23 research outputs found

    In-Body Energy Harvesting Power Management Interface for Post Heart Transplantation Monitoring

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    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

    An Inductorless Bias-Flip Rectifier for Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting

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    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

    DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF ENERGY HARVESTING CIRCUITS FOR MEDICAL DEVICES

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    Technological enhancements in a low-power CMOS process have promoted enhancement of advanced circuit design techniques for sensor related electronic circuits such as wearable and implantable sensor systems as well as wireless sensor nodes (WSNs). In these systems, the powering up the electronic circuits has remained as a major problem because battery technologies are not closely following the technological improvements in semiconductor devices and processes thus limiting the number of sensor electronics modules that can be incorporated in the design of the system. In addition, the traditional batteries can leak which can cause serious health hazards to the patients especially when using implantable sensors. As an alternative solution to prolonging the life of battery or to mitigate serious health problems that can be caused by battery, energy harvesting technique has appeared to be one of the possible solutions to supply power to the sensor electronics. As a result, this technique has been widely studied and researched in recent years. In a conventional sensor system, the accessible space for batteries is limited, which restricts the battery capacity. Therefore, energy harvesting has become an attractive solution for powering the sensor electronics. Power can be scavenged from ambient energy sources such as electromagnetic signal, wind, solar, mechanical vibration, radio frequency (RF), and thermal energy etc. Among these common ambient sources, RF and piezoelectric vibration-based energy scavenging systems have received a great deal of attention because of their ability to be integrated with sensor electronics modules and their moderate available power density. In this research, both RF and piezoelectric vibration-based energy harvesting systems have been studied and implemented in 130 nm standard CMOS process

    Energy processing circuits for low-power applications

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-205).Portable electronics have fueled the rich emergence of new applications including multi-media handsets, ubiquitous smart sensors and actuators, and wearable or implantable biomedical devices. New ultra-low power circuit techniques are constantly being proposed to further improve the energy efficiency of electronic circuits. A critical part of these energy conscious systems are the energy processing and power delivery circuits that interface with the energy sources and provide conditioned voltage and current levels to the load circuits. These energy processing circuits must maintain high efficiency and reduce component count for the final solution to be attractive from an energy, size and cost perspective. The first part of this work focuses on the development of on-chip voltage scalable switched capacitor DC-DC converters in digital CMOS processes. The converters are designed to deliver regulated scalable load voltages from 0.3V up to the battery voltage of 1.2V for ultra-dynamic voltage scaled systems. The efficiency limiting mechanisms of these on-chip DC-DC converters are analyzed and digital circuit techniques are proposed to tackle these losses. Measurement results from 3 test-chips implemented in 0.18pm and 65nm CMOS processes will be provided. The converters are able to maintain >75% efficiency over a wide range of load voltage and power levels while delivering load currents up to 8mA. An embedded switched capacitor DC-DC converter that acts as the power delivery unit in a 65nm subthreshold microcontroller system will be described. The remainder of the thesis deals with energy management circuits for battery-less systems. Harvesting ambient vibrational, light or thermal energy holds much promise in realizing the goal of a self-powered system. The second part of the thesis identifies problems with commonly used interface circuits for piezoelectric vibration energy harvesters and proposes a rectifier design that gives more than 4X improvement in output power extracted from the piezoelectric energy harvester. The rectifier designs are demonstrated with the help of a test-chip built in a 0.35pm CMOS process. The inductor used within the rectifier is shared efficiently with a multitude of DC-DC converters in the energy harvesting chip leading to a compact, cost-efficient solution. The DC-DC converters designed as part of a complete power management solution achieve efficiencies of greater than 85% even in the micro-watt power levels output by the harvester. The final part of the thesis deals with thermal energy harvesters to extract electrical power from body heat. Thermal harvesters in body-worn applications output ultra-low voltages of the order of 10's of milli-volts. This presents extreme challenges to CMOS circuits that are powered by the harvester. The final part of the thesis presents a new startup technique that allows CMOS circuits to interface directly with and extract power out of thermoelectric generators without the need for an external battery, clock or reference generators. The mechanically assisted startup circuit is demonstrated with the help of a test-chip built in a 0.35pm CMOS process and can work from as low as 35mV. This enables load circuits like processors and radios to operate directly of the thermoelectric generator without the aid of a battery. A complete power management solution is provided that can extract electrical power efficiently from the harvester independent of the input voltage conditions. With the help of closed-loop control techniques, the energy processing circuit is able to maintain efficiency over a wide range of load voltage and process variations.by Yogesh Kumar Ramadass.Ph.D

    A Fully Integrated Split-Electrode SSHC Rectifier for Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting

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    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 μm 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 μW

    Power extraction circuits for piezoelectric energy harvesters and time series data in water supply systems

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    This thesis investigates two fundamental technological challenges that prevent water utilities from deploying infrastructure monitoring apparatus with high spatial and temporal resolution: providing sufficient power for sensor nodes by increasing the power output from a vibration-driven energy harvester based on piezoelectric transduction, and the processing and storage of large volumes of data resulting from the increased level of pressure and flow rate monitoring. Piezoelectric energy harvesting from flow-induced vibrations within a water main represents a potential source of power to supply a sensor node capable of taking high- frequency measurements. A main factor limiting the amount of power from a piezoelectric device is the damping force that can be achieved. Electronic interface circuits can modify this damping in order to increase the power output to a reasonable level. A unified analytical framework was developed to compare circuits able to do this in terms of their power output. A new circuit is presented that out-performs existing circuits by a factor of 2, which is verified experimentally. The second problem concerns the management of large data sets arising from resolving challenges with the provision of power to sensor devices. The ability to process large data volumes is limited by the throughput of storage devices. For scientists to execute queries in a timely manner, query execution must be performant. The large volume of data that must be gathered to extract information from historic trends mandates a scalable approach. A scalable, durable storage and query execution framework is presented that is able to significantly improve the execution time of user-defined queries. A prototype database was implemented and validated on a cluster of commodity servers using live data gathered from a London pumping station and transmission mains. Benchmark results and reliability tests are included that demonstrate a significant improvement in performance over a traditional database architecture for a range of frequently-used operations, with many queries returning results near-instantaneously

    An Efficient SSHI Interface With Increased Input Range for Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting Under Variable Conditions

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    Piezoelectric vibration energy harvesters have been widely researched and are increasingly employed for powering wireless sensor nodes. The synchronized switch harvesting on inductor (SSHI) circuit is one of the most efficient interfaces for piezoelectric vibration energy harvesters. However, the traditional incarnation of this circuit suffers from a significant start-up issue that limits operation in low and variable amplitude vibration environments. This paper addresses this start-up issue for the SSHI rectifier by proposing a new architecture with SSHI startup circuitry. The startup circuitry monitors if the SSHI circuit is operating correctly and re-starts the SSHI interface if required. The proposed circuit is comprehensively analyzed and experimentally validated through tests conducted by integrating a commercial piezoelectric vibration energy harvester with the new interface circuit designed in a 0.35-μm HV CMOS process. Compared to conventional SSHI rectifiers, the proposed circuit significantly decreases the required minimum input excitation amplitude before energy can be harvested, making it possible to extract energy over an increased excitation range.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Counci

    Power electronic interfaces for piezoelectric energy harvesters

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    Motion-driven energy harvesters can replace batteries in low power wireless sensors, however selection of the optimal type of transducer for a given situation is difficult as the performance of the complete system must be taken into account in the optimisation. In this thesis, a complete piezoelectric energy harvester system model including a piezoelectric transducer, a power conditioning circuit, and a battery, is presented allowing for the first time a complete optimisation of such a system to be performed. Combined with previous work on modelling an electrostatic energy harvesting system, a comparison of the two transduction methods was performed. The results at 100 Hz indicate that for small MEMS devices at low accelerations, electrostatic harvesting systems outperform piezoelectric but the opposite is true as the size and acceleration increases. Thus the transducer type which achieves the best power density in an energy harvesting system for a given size, acceleration and operating frequency can be chosen. For resonant vibrational energy harvesting, piezoelectric transducers have received a lot of attention due to their MEMS manufacturing compatibility with research focused on the transduction method but less attention has been paid to the output power electronics. Detailed design considerations for a piezoelectric harvester interface circuit, known as single-supply pre-biasing (SSPB), are developed which experimentally demonstrate the circuit outperforming the next best known interface's theoretical limit. A new mode of operation for the SSPB circuit is developed which improves the power generation performance when the piezoelectric material properties have degraded. A solution for tracking the maximum power point as the excitation changes is also presented.Open Acces

    A Study on Energy-Efficient Inductor Current Controls for Maximum Energy Delivery in Battery-free Buck Converter

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2017. 2. 김재하.A discontinuous conduction mode (DCM) buck converter, which acts as a voltage regulator in battery-free applications, is proposed to maximize the ener-gy delivery to the load system. In this work, we focus the energy loss problem during start-up and steady-state operation of the buck converter, which severely limits the energy delivery. Especially, the energy loss problem arises from the fact that there is no constant power source such as a battery and the only a small amount of energy harvested from the ambient energy sources is available. To address such energy loss problem, this dissertation proposes optimal induc-tor current control techniques at each operation to greatly reduce the energy losses. First, a switching-based stepwise capacitor charging scheme is presented that can charge the output capacitor with constant inductor current during start-up operation. By switching the inductor with gradually incrementing duty-cycle ratios in a stepwise fashion, the buck converter can make the inductor current a constant current source, which can greatly reduce the start-up energy loss com-pared to that in the conventional capacitor charging scheme with a voltage source. Second, a variable on-time (VOT) pulse-frequency-modulation (PFM) scheme is presented that can keep the peak inductor current constant during steady-state operation. By adaptively varying the on-time according to the op-erating voltage conditions of the buck converter, it can suppress the voltage ripple and improve the power efficiency even with a small output capacitor. Third, an adaptive off-time positioning zero-crossing detector (AOP-ZCD) is presented that can adaptively position the turn-off timing of the low-side switch close to the zero-inductor-current timing by predicting the inductor current waveform without using a power-hungry continuous-time ZCD. To demonstrate the proposed design concepts, the prototype battery-free wireless remote switch including the piezoelectric energy harvester and the proposed buck converter was fabricated in a 250 nm high-voltage CMOS technology. It can harvest a total energy of 246 μJ from a single button press action of a 300-mm2 lead magnesium niobate-lead titanate (PMN-PT) piezoelectric disc, and deliver more than 200 μJ to the load, which is sufficient to transmit a 4-byte-long message via 2.4-GHz wireless USB channel over a 10-m distance. If such battery-free application does not use the proposed buck converter, the energy losses in-curred at the buck converter would be larger than the energy harvested, and therefore it cannot operate with a single button-pressing action. Furthermore, thanks to the proposed energy efficient buck converter, the battery-free wire-less remote switch can be realized by using a cheaper PZT piezoelectric source, which can achieve a 10× cost reduction.CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 MOTIVATION 1 1.2 THESIS CONTRIBUTION AND ORGANIZATION 6 CHAPTER 2 OPERATION MODE AND OVERALL ARCHITECTURE 8 2.1 TOPOLOGY SELECTION 8 2.2 PRINCIPLE OF OPERATION 11 2.2.1 BASIC OPERATION IN CCM 12 2.2.2 BASIC OPERATION IN DCM 15 2.3 OPERATION MODE 17 2.4 OVERALL ARCHITECTURE 19 CHAPTER 3 OPTIMAL INDUCTOR CURRENT CONTROLS FOR MAXIMUM ENERGY DELIVERY 23 3.1 CONSTANT INDUCTOR CURRENT CONTROL WITH SWITCHING-BASED STEPWISE CAPACITOR CHARGING SCHEME 24 3.1.1 CONVENTIONAL CHARGING SCHEME WITH A SWITCH 24 3.1.2 ADIABATIC STEPWISE CHARGING 27 3.1.3 PROPOSED START-UP SCHEME 29 3.2 CONSTANT INDUCTOR PEAK CURRENT CONTROL WITH VARIABLE ON-TIME PFM SCHEME 35 3.2.1 BASIC OPERATION OF PFM BUCK CONVERTER 35 3.2.2 CONSTANT ON-TIME PFM SCHEME 39 3.2.3 VARIABLE ON-TIME PFM SCHEME 41 3.3 INDUCTOR CURRENT PREDICTION WITH ADAP-TIVE OFF-TIME POSITIONING ZCD (AOP-ZCD) 44 3.3.1 PREVIOUS SAMPLING-BASED ZCD 44 3.3.2 PROPOSED ADAPTIVE OFF-TIME POSITIONING ZCD 47 CHAPTER 4 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION 49 4.1 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION OF SWITCHING-BASED STEPWISE CAPACITOR CHARGER 49 4.1.1 VOLTAGE DETECTOR (VD) 50 4.1.2 DIGITAL PULSE WIDTH MODULATOR (DPWM) 52 4.1.3 PROGRAMMABLE DUTY-CYCLE CONTROLLER (DCC) 55 4.1.4 SWITCHED CAPACITOR (SC) STEP-DOWN CONVERTER 57 4.2 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION OF VARIABLE ON-TIME PULSE GENERATOR 59 4.3 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION OF ADAPTIVE OFF-TIME POSITIONING ZCD 64 4.3.1 ADAPTIVE OFF-TIME (AOT) PULSE GENERATOR 64 4.3.2 TIMING ERROR DETECTOR AND SHIFT-REGISTER 68 CHAPTER 5 MEASUREMENT RESULTS OF PROPOSED BUCK CONVERTER 70 5.1 SWITCHING-BASED STEPWISE CAPACITOR CHARGER 71 5.2 STEADY-STATE PERFORMANCE WITH VOT PULSE GENERATOR AND AOP-ZCD 74 CHAPTER 6 REALIZATION OF BATTERY-FREE WIRELESS REMOTE SWITCH 84 6.1 KEY BUILDING BLOCKS OF BATTERY-FREE WIRELESS REMOTE SWITCH 85 6.2 PIEZOELECTRIC ENERGY HARVESTER WITH P-SSHI RECTIFIER 86 6.2.1 ANALYSIS ON SINGLE-PULSED ENERGY HARVESTING 88 6.2.2 PROPOSED PIEZOELECTRIC ENERGY HARVESTER 91 6.2.3 CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION 93 6.3 MEASUREMENT RESULTS OF BATTERY-FREE WIRELESS SWITCH 96 CHAPTER 7 CONCLUSION 101 BIBLIOGRAPHY 103 초 록 110Docto
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