808 research outputs found

    National MEMS Technology Roadmap - Markets, Applications and Devices

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    MEMS teknologiaa on jo pitkÀÀn kÀytetty lukuisien eri laitteiden valmistamiseen. Osa nÀistÀ laitteista on ollut markkinoilla jo useita vuosia, kun taas osa on vasta kehitysvaiheessa. Jotta tutkimus ja kehitystyötÀ osattaisiin jatkossa kohdistaa oikeille painopistealueille, on tÀrkeÀÀ tietÀÀ mihin suuntaan kehitys on menossa. TÀmÀ työ on osa kansallista MEMS teknologioiden tiekartta -projektia ja sen tavoitteena oli selvittÀÀ MEMS laitteiden kehityksen suuntaa. Työ toteutettiin laajana kirjallisuustutkimuksena. LisÀksi tulosten tueksi haastateltiin asiantuntijoita Suomen MEMS teollisuudesta. TyössÀ tarkasteltiin lukuisia jo markkinoilta löytyviÀ ja vasta kehitteillÀ olevia MEMS laitteita ja analysoitiin niitÀ sekÀ teknisestÀ ettÀ kaupallisesta nÀkökulmasta. Tutkimuksen perusteella kÀvi ilmi, ettÀ MEMS markkinat ovat pitkÀÀn muodostuneet vakiintuneista laitteista kuten mustesuihkupÀistÀ, kiihtyvyysantureista, paineantureista sekÀ RF suotimista. LisÀksi mikrofonit, gyroskoopit ja optiset laitteet ovat olleet kaupallisesti saatavilla jo pitkÀÀn. Markkinat ovat hiljattain alkaneet tehdÀ tilaa myös uusille MEMS laitteille, joita tulee ulos nopeaa vauhtia. ViimeisimpÀnÀ markkinoille tulleita laitteita ovat erilaiset mikrofluidistiikka laitteet, mikrobolometrit sekÀ yhdistelmÀanturit. Pian kaupallisesti saatavia laitteita ovat magnetometrit, automaattitarkennuslaitteet sekÀ MEMS oskillaattorit. NÀiden laitteiden lisÀksi kehitteillÀ on monia uusia MEMS laitteita, jotka saattavat tarjota merkittÀviÀ mahdollisuuksia tulevaisuudessa. KehitteillÀ olevia laitteita ovat erilaiset lÀÀketieteelliset laitteet, atomikellot, mikrojÀÀhdyttimet, mikrokaiuttimet, energiantuottolaitteet sekÀ RFID-laitteet. Kaikki kehitteillÀ olevista laitteista eivÀt vÀlttÀmÀttÀ tule menestymÀÀn kaupallisesti, mutta jatkuva tutkimustyö osoittaa, ettÀ monilla MEMS laitteilla on potentiaalia useissa eri sovelluksissa. MarkkinanÀkökulmasta tarkasteltuna suurin potentiaali piilee kuluttajaelektroniikka markkinoilla. Muita tulevaisuuden kannalta potentiaalisia markkinoita ovat lÀÀketieteelliset ja teollisuusmarkkinat. Tutkimus osoitti ettÀ MEMS laitteiden tutkimukseen ja kehitykseen liittyy monia potentiaalisia painopistealueita tulevaisuudessa. KÀyttömahdollisuuksien parantamiseksi monet jo vakiintuneet laitteet kaipaavat vielÀ parannuksia. Toisaalta, jo olemassa olevia laitteita voidaan hyödyntÀÀ uusissa sovelluksissa. LisÀksi monet uusista ja kehitteillÀ olevista MEMS laitteista vaativat vielÀ kehitystyötÀ.MEMS technology has long been applied to the fabrication of various devices from which some have already been in use for several years, whereas others are still under development. In order to find future focus areas in research and development activities in the industry, it is important to know where the development is going. This thesis was conducted as a part of National MEMS technology roadmap, and it aimed for determining the evolution of MEMS devices. The work was conducted as an extensive literature review. In addition, experts from the Finnish MEMS industry were interviewed in order obtain a broader insight to the results. In this thesis various existing and emerging MEMS devices were reviewed and analyzed from technological and commercial perspectives. The study showed that the MEMS market has long been composed of established devices, such as inkjet print-heads, pressure sensors, accelerometers and RF filters. Also gyroscopes, microphones and optical MEMS devices have already been on the market for a long time. Lately, many new devices have started to find their place in the markets. The most recently introduced commercial devices include microfluidic devices, micro bolometers, and combo sensors. There are also a few devices including magnetometers, MEMS oscillators, and auto-focus devices that are currently crossing the gap from R&D to commercialization. In addition to the already available devices, many new MEMS devices are under development, and might offer significant opportunities in the future. These emerging devices include various bioMEMS devices, atomic clocks, micro-coolers, micro speakers, power MEMS devices, and RFID devices. All of the emerging devices might not find commercial success, but the constant stream shows, that there are numerous applications, where MEMS devices could be applied in. From a market point of view, the greatest potential in the future lies in consumer electronics market. Other highly potential markets include medical and industrial markets. The results of the thesis indicate that there are many potential focus areas in the future related to MEMS devices, including improvements of the existing devices in order to gain better utilization, application of the existing devices in new areas, and development work among the emerging devices

    Harvesting Energy of Radio Frequency

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    Renewable Energy sources are the center of attraction for research and development all over the world nowadays. Oil and Gas are no more the main source of Energy, consequently the demand of a lasting cheap source of energy that is environmental friendly, is the main challenge recently. During the last decade, power consumption has decreased opening the field for energy harvesting to become a real time solution for providing different sources of electrical power. Energy Harvesting is a new technology that is going to make a revolution in the coming decade. Energy Harvesting is a technique to provide alternative sources of energy that are environmental friendly and low in cost. Radio Frequency Energy Harvesting is one of the methods to provide electrical energy from the ambient Radio Frequency Energy that already exists in the environment. For example Hand phones can be directly charged from Radio frequencies in the environment like 915 MHz. Laptops can be charged by frequencies like 2.45 GHz. RFID passive tags can be powered by these radio frequencies without the supply of any batteries increasing the range of passive RFID tags to longer distances with lower cost. Radio Frequency Energy Harvesting can provide a world with batteryless devices. With RF Energy Harvesting, the true mobility can be achieved where mobile devices do not depend on centralized power sources for charging. Instead they make use of the existing energy in the environment

    Radio frequency energy harvesting for autonomous systems

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    A thesis submitted to the University of Bedfordshire in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of PhilosophyRadio Frequency Energy Harvesting (RFEH) is a technology which enables wireless power delivery to multiple devices from a single energy source. The main components of this technology are the antenna and the rectifying circuitry that converts the RF signal into DC power. The devices which are using Radio Frequency (RF) power may be integrated into Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), biomedical implants, Internet of Things (IoT), Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), smart meters, telemetry systems and may even be used to charge mobile phones. Aside from autonomous systems such as WSNs and RFID, the multi-billion portable electronics market – from GSM phones to MP3 players – would be an attractive application for RF energy harvesting if the power requirements are met. To investigate the potential for ambient RFEH, several RF site surveys were conducted around London. Using the results from these surveys, various harvesters were designed and tested for different frequency bands from the RF sources with the highest power density within the Medium Wave (MW), ultra- and super-high (UHF and SHF) frequency spectrum. Prototypes were fabricated and tested for each of the bands and proved that a large urban area around Brookmans park radio centre is suitable location for harvesting ambient RF energy. Although the RFEH offers very good efficiency performance, if a single antenna is considered, the maximum power delivered is generally not enough to power all the elements of an autonomous system. In this thesis we present techniques for optimising the power efficiency of the RFEH device under demanding conditions such as ultra-low power densities, arbitrary polarisation and diverse load impedances. Subsequently, an energy harvesting ferrite rod rectenna is designed to power up a wireless sensor and its transmitter, generating dedicated Medium Wave (MW) signals in an indoor environment. Harvested power management, application scenarios and practical results are also presented

    Wireless body sensor networks for health-monitoring applications

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    This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article accepted for publication in Physiological Measurement. The publisher is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0967-3334/29/11/R01

    Sustainable Forest Management Techniques

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    Wireless power transmission: R&D activities within Europe

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    Wireless power transmission (WPT) is an emerging technology that is gaining increased visibility in recent years. Efficient WPT circuits, systems and strategies can address a large group of applications spanning from batteryless systems, battery-free sensors, passive RF identification, near-field communications, and many others. WPT is a fundamental enabling technology of the Internet of Things concept, as well as machine-to-machine communications, since it minimizes the use of batteries and eliminates wired power connections. WPT technology brings together RF and dc circuit and system designers with different backgrounds on circuit design, novel materials and applications, and regulatory issues, forming a cross disciplinary team in order to achieve an efficient transmission of power over the air interface. This paper aims to present WPT technology in an integrated way, addressing state-of-the-art and challenges, and to discuss future R&D perspectives summarizing recent activities in Europe.The work of N. Borges Carvalho and A. J. S. Soares Boaventura was supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under Project CREATION EXCL/EEI-TEL/0067/2012 and Doctoral Scholarship SFRH/BD/80615/2011. The work of H. Rogier was supported by BELSPO through the IAP Phase VII BESTCOM project and the Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders (FWO-V). The work of A. Georgiadis and A. Collado was supported by the European Union (EU) under Marie Curie FP7-PEOPLE-2009-IAPP 251557 and the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness Project TEC 2012-39143. The work of J. A. García and M. N. Ruíz was supported by the Spanish Ministries MICINN and MINECO under FEDER co-funded Project TEC2011-29126-C03-01 and Project CSD2008-00068. The work of J. Kracek and M. Mazanek was supported in part by the Czech Ministry of Education Youth and Sports under Project OC09075–Novel Emerging Wireless Systems

    INVESTIGATING TECHNIQUES AND RESEARCH TRENDS IN RF ENERGY HARVESTING

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    ABSTRACT For more than two decades, there were extensive research activities towards harnessing the energy captured from the natural resources and use it for human utility. This field of research, commonly known as energy harvesting, has various characteristics and subsidiary applications. Presently, it is seen that use of mobile phones are increasing due to the advancement of communication systems and numerous services incorporated within it make the availability of free RF signals. This paper discusses various techniques and attempts initiated by research community in harnessing this free RF signals for the purpose of energy harvesting to power up low-powered electronic devices and embedded systems. It also presents some of the most significant research procedures that use RF signals for harvesting energy and their implausible research gap

    On Spectrum Sharing Between Energy Harvesting Cognitive Radio Users and Primary Users

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    This paper investigates the maximum secondary throughput for a rechargeable secondary user (SU) sharing the spectrum with a primary user (PU) plugged to a reliable power supply. The SU maintains a finite energy queue and harvests energy from natural resources and primary radio frequency (RF) transmissions. We propose a power allocation policy at the PU and analyze its effect on the throughput of both the PU and SU. Furthermore, we study the impact of the bursty arrivals at the PU on the energy harvested by the SU from RF transmissions. Moreover, we investigate the impact of the rate of energy harvesting from natural resources on the SU throughput. We assume fading channels and compute exact closed-form expressions for the energy harvested by the SU under fading. Results reveal that the proposed power allocation policy along with the implemented RF energy harvesting at the SU enhance the throughput of both primary and secondary links
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