26 research outputs found
Underwater energy harvesting to extend operation time of submersible sensors
A linear electromagnetic energy harvesting device for underwater applications, fabricated with a simple manufacturing process, was developed to operate with movement frequencies from 0.1 to 0.4 Hz. The generator has two coils, and the effect of the combination of the two coils was investigated. The experimental study has shown that the energy capture system was able to supply energy to several ocean sensors, producing 7.77 mJ per second with wave movements at 0.4 Hz. This study shows that this energy is enough to restore the energy used by the battery or the capacitor and continue supplying energy to the sensors used in the experimental work. For an ocean wave frequency of 0.4 Hz, the generator can supply power to 8 sensors or 48 sensors, depending on the energy consumed and its optimization.This work is co-funded by the project K2D-Knowledge and Data from the Deep to Space with reference POCI-01-0247-FEDER-045941, co-financed by European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), through the Operational Program for Competitiveness and Internationalization (COMPETE2020) and by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology-FCT under MIT-Portugal Program. This work is also co-financed by Programa Operacional Regional do Norte (NORTE2020), through Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional (FEDER), Project NORTE-01-0145-FEDER000032âNextSea, and by national funds through FCTâFundação para a CiĂȘncia e Tecnologia, I.P. under project SONDA (PTDC/EME-SIS/1960/2020)
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The Convergence of Parametric Resonance and Vibration Energy Harvesting
Energy harvesting is an emerging technology that derives electricity from the ambient environment in a decentralised and self-contained fashion. Applications include self-powered medical implants, wearable electronics and wireless sensors for structural health monitoring. Amongst the vast options of ambient sources, vibration energy harvesting (VEH) has attracted by far the most
research attention. Two of the key persisting issues of VEH are the limited power density compared to conventional power supplies and confined operational frequency bandwidth in light of the random, broadband and fast-varying nature of real vibration.
The convention has relied on directly excited resonance to maximise the mechanical-to-electrical energy conversion efficiency. This thesis takes a fundamentally different approach by employing parametric resonance, which, unlike the former, its resonant amplitude growth does not saturate due to linear damping. Therefore, parametric resonance, when activated, has the potential to accumulate much more energy than direct resonance. The vibrational nonlinearities that are almost always associated with parametric resonance can offer a modest frequency widening.
Despite its promising theoretical potentials, there is an intrinsic damping dependent initiation threshold amplitude, which must be attained prior to its onset. The relatively low amplitude of real vibration and the unavoidable presence of electrical damping to extract the energy render the onset of parametric resonance practically elusive. Design approaches have been devised to passively
minimise this initiation threshold.
Simulation and experimental results of various design iterations have demonstrated favourable results for parametric resonance as well as the various threshold-reduction mechanisms. For instance, one of the macro-scale electromagnetic prototypes (âŒ1800 cm3) when parametrically driven, has demonstrated around 50% increase in half power band and an order of magnitude higher peak power (171.5 mW at 0.57 msâ2) in contrast to the same prototype directly driven at fundamental resonance (27.75 mW at 0.65 msâ2). A MEMS (micro-electromechanical system) prototype with the additional threshold-reduction design needed 1 msâ2 excitation to activate parametric resonance while a comparable device without the threshold-reduction mechanism required in excess of 30 msâ2. One of the macro-scale piezoelectric prototypes operated into auto-parametric resonance has demon-strated notable further reduction to the initiation threshold. A vacuum packaged MEMS prototype demonstrated broadening of the frequency bandwidth along with higher power peak (324 nW and 160 Hz) for the parametric regime compared to when operated in room pressure (166 nW and 80 Hz), unlike the higher but narrower direct resonant peak (60.9 nW and 11 Hz in vacuum and 20.8
nW and 40 Hz in room pressure).
The simultaneous incorporation of direct resonance and bi-stability have been investigated to realise multi-regime VEH. The potential to integrate parametric resonance in the electrical domains have also been numerically explored. The ultimate aim is not to replace direct resonance but rather for the various resonant phenomena to complement each other and together harness a larger region of the available power spectrum
Energy Harvesters and Self-powered Sensors for Smart Electronics
This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue âEnergy Harvesters and Self-Powered Sensors for Smart Electronicsâ that was published in Micromachines, which showcases the rapid development of various energy harvesting technologies and novel devices. In the current 5G and Internet of Things (IoT) era, energy demand for numerous and widely distributed IoT nodes has greatly driven the innovation of various energy harvesting technologies, providing key functionalities as energy harvesters (i.e., sustainable power supplies) and/or self-powered sensors for diverse IoT systems. Accordingly, this book includes one editorial and nine research articles to explore different aspects of energy harvesting technologies such as electromagnetic energy harvesters, piezoelectric energy harvesters, and hybrid energy harvesters. The mechanism design, structural optimization, performance improvement, and a wide range of energy harvesting and self-powered monitoring applications have been involved. This book can serve as a guidance for researchers and students who would like to know more about the device design, optimization, and applications of different energy harvesting technologies
Modeling supercritical fluids and fabricating electret films to address dielectric challenges in high-power-density systems
Wide bandgap (WBG) devices and power electronic converters (PEC) that enable the dynamic control of energy and high-power density designs inevitably contain defects including sharp edges, triple points, and cavities, which result in local electric field enhancements. The intensified local electric stresses cause either immediate dielectric breakdown or partial discharge (PD) that erodes electrical insulators and accelerates device aging. With the goal of addressing these dielectric challenges emerging in power-dense applications, this dissertation focuses on 1) modeling the dielectric characteristics of supercritical fluids (SCFs), which is a new dielectric medium with high dielectric strength and high cooling capability; and 2) establishing the optimal fabrication conditions of electrets, which is a new dielectric solution that neutralizes locally enhanced electric fields.
In this dissertation, the dielectric breakdown characteristics of SCFs are modeled as a function of pressure based on the electron scattering cross section data of clusters that vary in size as a function of temperature and pressure around the critical point. The modeled breakdown electric field is compared with the experimental breakdown measurements of supercritical fluids, which show close agreement. In addition, electrets are fabricated based on the triode-corona charging method and their PD mitigation performance is evaluated through a series of PD experiments. Electrets are fabricated under various charging conditions, including charging voltage, duration, polarity, and temperature with the goal of identifying the optimal condition that leads to effective PD mitigation. The PD mitigation performance of electrets fabricated based on these charging conditions is further assessed by investigating the impact of various power electronics voltage characteristics, including dv/dt, polarity, switching frequency, and duty cycle. Electret based electric field neutralization approach is further utilized in increasing the critical flashover voltage associated with the surface flashover voltage. Moreover, due to the high mechanical strength of epoxy composites at cryogenic temperatures, in this dissertation, epoxy-based electrets are fabricated as a solution to PD in high temperature superconducting cables. The experimental demonstrations conducted with electret in this dissertation is dedicated for the establishing the electret based electric field neutralization approach as a dielectric solution for the dielectric challenges in power electronics driven systems
Advanced Materials and Technologies in Nanogenerators
This reprint discusses the various applications, new materials, and evolution in the field of nanogenerators. This lays the foundation for the popularization of their broad applications in energy science, environmental protection, wearable electronics, self-powered sensors, medical science, robotics, and artificial intelligence
Advance in Energy Harvesters/Nanogenerators and Self-Powered Sensors
This reprint is a collection of the Special Issue "Advance in Energy Harvesters/Nanogenerators and Self-Powered Sensors" published in Nanomaterials, which includes one editorial, six novel research articles and four review articles, showcasing the very recent advances in energy-harvesting and self-powered sensing technologies. With its broad coverage of innovations in transducing/sensing mechanisms, material and structural designs, system integration and applications, as well as the timely reviews of the progress in energy harvesting and self-powered sensing technologies, this reprint could give readers an excellent overview of the challenges, opportunities, advancements and development trends of this rapidly evolving field
Applications of nanogenerators for biomedical engineering and healthcare systems
The dream of human beings for long living has stimulated the rapid development of biomedical and healthcare equipment. However, conventional biomedical and healthcare devices have shortcomings such as short service life, large equipment size, and high potential safety hazards. Indeed, the power supply for conventional implantable device remains predominantly batteries. The emerging nanogenerators, which harvest micro/nanomechanical energy and thermal energy from human beings and convert into electrical energy, provide an ideal solution for selfâpowering of biomedical devices. The combination of nanogenerators and biomedicine has been accelerating the development of selfâpowered biomedical equipment. This article first introduces the operating principle of nanogenerators and then reviews the progress of nanogenerators in biomedical applications, including power supply, smart sensing, and effective treatment. Besides, the microbial disinfection and biodegradation performances of nanogenerators have been updated. Next, the protection devices have been discussed such as face mask with air filtering function together with realâtime monitoring of human health from the respiration and heat emission. Besides, the nanogenerator devices have been categorized by the types of mechanical energy from human beings, such as the body movement, tissue and organ activities, energy from chemical reactions, and gravitational potential energy. Eventually, the challenges and future opportunities in the applications of nanogenerators are delivered in the conclusive remarks. The combination of nanogenerator and biomedicine have been accelerating the development of selfâpowered biomedical devices, which show a bright future in biomedicine and healthcare such as smart sensing, and therapy
Etude et développement de nouveaux matériaux et structures électroactifs pour la récupération d'énergie
This thesis has been devoted to electrostatic mechanical energy harvesting based on capacitors inspired by fractal geometry, to mechanical energy harvesting based on beams with electrostrictive polymers, and to thermal energy harvesting based on ferromagnetic materials. For electrostatic energy harvesting without electrets, interdigitated capacitors are usually applied as in-plane overlap varying and in-plane gap closing electrostatic generators. In consideration of the limit of aspect ratio for fingers in the capacitor, we would like to improve the capacitor configuration by taking advantage of self-similarity patterns. The concept is to gradually add fingers of smaller widths between original ones to form a mountain-shape capacitor. According to the different width ranges of capacitors, they are classified as of different orders whose performances vary with the vibration amplitude. Harvested energy over one cycle for capacitors of order 1, 2 and 3 has been demonstrated by theoretical and FEM results. In application, the order of capacitor needs to be properly chosen to maximize the harvested energy. Electrostrictive polymer (polyurethane) has been utilized along with a beam to perform mechanical energy harvesting. Two models have been analyzed: clamped-free beam with a polymer film attached at the clamped end, clamped-free bimorph beam. The simple model for electrostrictive devices under flexural solicitation is set up on the base of analysis of energy conversion and it shows that the electrostrictive system can be reduced to a simple spring-mass-damper system with a quadratic dependence with the applied voltage on the mechanical side and to a current source controlled by the applied voltage with a capacitive internal impedance on the electrical side. Experiments based on the clamped-free beam with a polymer film attached to the clamped end have been carried out to evaluate the mechanical to electrical conversion. The thermal energy generator is based on a ferromagnetic material, a magnet and a coil. As the magnetic permeability of ferromagnetic materials encounters drastic variation around the Curie temperature, the concept of the generator is to take advantage of the permeability variation caused by temperature decrease to generate sharp variation in magnetic flux which induces a current in the coil. According to theoretical results, the generated current is closely related to the temperature variation and the variation velocity. Experiments have been carried out on Ni30Fe of which the Curie temperature is 55 ÂșC. When the temperature decreases from 20.5 ÂșC to -42.4 ÂșC, the maximum power is about 4Ă10^(-7)W with the load to be 2 Ω.La croissance formidable des dispositifs sans fils et autonomes (rĂ©seaux de capteurs, objets connectĂ©sâŠ) voit actuellement son dĂ©veloppement limitĂ© par les batteries qui prĂ©sente une durĂ©e de vie limitĂ©e et ainsi soulĂšve des problĂšmes de maintenance. Afin de palier Ă cette limitation, lâutilisation de lâĂ©nergie directement disponible dans lâenvironnement immĂ©diat du dispositif, conduisant au concept de « rĂ©cupĂ©ration dâĂ©nergie », est une voie fortement explorĂ©e depuis une dizaine dâannĂ©es. Ainsi, lâobjectif de cette thĂšse a Ă©tĂ© de dĂ©velopper de nouvelles techniques et/ou dâutiliser de nouveaux principes de conversion afin de proposer des alternatives aux techniques de rĂ©cupĂ©ration dâĂ©nergie classiques. Dans un premier temps, lâoptimisation de rĂ©cupĂ©rateurs Ă©lectrostatiques a Ă©tĂ© Ă©tudiĂ©e. Les performances de ces systĂšmes Ă©tant fortement liĂ©es Ă la variation de capacitĂ©, une structure fractale, permettant un accroissement important des surfaces en regard entre deux Ă©lectrodes (et donc de la capacitĂ©) lorsque ces derniĂšres sont proches, a Ă©tĂ© proposĂ©e et modĂ©lisĂ©e. Il est ainsi montrer un accroissement significatif des possibilitĂ©s de rĂ©cupĂ©ration dâĂ©nergie ; ces derniĂšres Ă©tant Ă©troitement liĂ©es Ă lâamplitude de vibration du systĂšme. Le second axe de recherche de cette thĂšse sâest attelĂ© Ă dĂ©velopper un modĂšle haut niveau simple mais prĂ©cis pour les structure utilisant des polymĂšres Ă©lectrostrictifs fonctionnant en flexion. Une analyse Ă©nergĂ©tique a permis de mettre en place un modĂšle Ă©lectromĂ©canique masse-ressort-amortisseur couplĂ© avec une source de courant contrĂŽlĂ©e par les excitations mĂ©caniques et Ă©lectriques du systĂšme, permettant ainsi une conception plus aisĂ©e du microgĂ©nĂ©rateur. Enfin, la derniĂšre partie de cette thĂšse sâest intĂ©ressĂ©e Ă la conversion dâĂ©nergie thermique utilisant la variation de permĂ©abilitĂ© des matĂ©riaux ferromagnĂ©tiques, ouvrant de nouvelles possibilitĂ©s de conversion de lâĂ©nergie. En particulier, une technique simple et autonome consiste Ă crĂ©er un champ magnĂ©tique de polarisation Ă lâaide dâun aimant, permettant une variation du flux magnĂ©tique lors dâun changement de tempĂ©rature, qui peut ĂȘtre converti sous forme Ă©lectrique Ă lâaide dâun bobinage
Real-Time Biosensing and Energy Harvesting on Human Body
This thesis covers two technologies that can be applied to the human body for real-time applicable usages: biosensors and energy harvesters. The first part of the thesis describes optical biosensing techniques based on surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). Our large-scale spatially uniform Raman enhancing substrates allow low-level bio molecule detection due to their strong plasmonic enhancement of the 3D Au-NP clusters. This method also enables low-level insulin sensing as well as insulin concentration analysis in islet secretion. These results can lead to developing simple and easy biosensing methods allowing real-time biosensing applications including convenient monitoring of health, early disease detection, and diabetes-related clinical measurements.
The second part of the thesis suggests an energy harvesting method using vocal vibrations. The vocal folds produce mechanical vibrations that can serve as an energy source with consistent amplitude and frequency. The vibration hotspots exist at various locations on the human upper body. The energy harvesting system consisting of piezoelectric devices and energy harvesting circuits generates 3.99 mW of electrical power. The amount of energy generated from vocal vibrations is sufficient to charge a Li-Po battery which can drive an LCD display or charge Bluetooth headphones. This method demonstrating a relatively high power generation and convenience of practical use can provide a real-time complementary charging technique for wearable electronics like wireless headphones and smart glasses as well as medical implantable devices such as deep brain stimulators, cochlear implants and pacemakers.</p
Applications of nanogenerators for biomedical engineering and healthcare systems
The dream of human beings for long living has stimulated the rapid development of biomedical and healthcare equipment. However, conventional biomedical and healthcare devices have shortcomings such as short service life, large equipment size, and high potential safety hazards. Indeed, the power supply for conventional implantable device remains predominantly batteries. The emerging nanogenerators, which harvest micro/nanomechanical energy and thermal energy from human beings and convert into electrical energy, provide an ideal solution for self-powering of biomedical devices. The combination of nanogenerators and biomedicine has been accelerating the development of self-powered biomedical equipment. This article first introduces the operating principle of nanogenerators and then reviews the progress of nanogenerators in biomedical applications, including power supply, smart sensing, and effective treatment. Besides, the microbial disinfection and biodegradation performances of nanogenerators have been updated. Next, the protection devices have been discussed such as face mask with air filtering function together with real-time monitoring of human health from the respiration and heat emission. Besides, the nanogenerator devices have been categorized by the types of mechanical energy from human beings, such as the body movement, tissue and organ activities, energy from chemical reactions, and gravitational potential energy. Eventually, the challenges and future opportunities in the applications of nanogenerators are delivered in the conclusive remarks.Web of Science4