Skip to main content
Top
Published in:
Cover of the book

2019 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Introduction to Energy Harvesting Transducers and Their Power Conditioning Circuits

Activate our intelligent search to find suitable subject content or patents.

search-config
loading …

Abstract

Energy harvesters are used to scavenge energy from the ambient, such as light, heat, and vibration, to power wireless sensor nodes. However, power conditioning circuits are needed to maximize conversion efficiency and convert unstable input voltages, either DC or AC, to stable DC output voltages that can be used for sensors or wireless transmitters. The available ambient energy depends on the applications, but each energy source has its own advantages and limitations. Light can be converted to DC electricity through photovoltaic (PV) principle, heat can be converted to DC through thermoelectricity, and vibration energy can be harvested through piezoelectricity or electromagnetic induction mechanism. While light is the most pervasive and has excellent energy density outdoors, its energy density is much lower indoors, and it requires large surface area that can be prohibitive for some applications. Thermoelectric harvester can generate electricity through temperature differences, but in many cases, it would require heat sink to reduce external thermal resistance to build enough temperature difference across the device. It is quiet and reliable with no moving parts. Vibration is pervasive, but vibrational harvester has narrow bandwidth, and its efficiency can drop significantly once the external vibration frequency deviates from resonant frequency for the harvesters. From power conditioning point of view, PV requires maximum power point tracking which itself will consume some currents. Output voltages from the thermoelectric harvester are usually small with limited temperature differences, so step-up would be needed. Load impedance needs to match the internal impedance for maximum power, and output AC output from vibration harvesters need to be rectified. In this chapter, we will go over the common energy harvesters and their power conditioning circuits.

Dont have a licence yet? Then find out more about our products and how to get one now:

Springer Professional "Wirtschaft+Technik"

Online-Abonnement

Mit Springer Professional "Wirtschaft+Technik" erhalten Sie Zugriff auf:

  • über 102.000 Bücher
  • über 537 Zeitschriften

aus folgenden Fachgebieten:

  • Automobil + Motoren
  • Bauwesen + Immobilien
  • Business IT + Informatik
  • Elektrotechnik + Elektronik
  • Energie + Nachhaltigkeit
  • Finance + Banking
  • Management + Führung
  • Marketing + Vertrieb
  • Maschinenbau + Werkstoffe
  • Versicherung + Risiko

Jetzt Wissensvorsprung sichern!

Springer Professional "Technik"

Online-Abonnement

Mit Springer Professional "Technik" erhalten Sie Zugriff auf:

  • über 67.000 Bücher
  • über 390 Zeitschriften

aus folgenden Fachgebieten:

  • Automobil + Motoren
  • Bauwesen + Immobilien
  • Business IT + Informatik
  • Elektrotechnik + Elektronik
  • Energie + Nachhaltigkeit
  • Maschinenbau + Werkstoffe




 

Jetzt Wissensvorsprung sichern!

Literature
2.
go back to reference Lu Y, Yao S, Shao B, Brokaw P. A 200nA single inductor dual-input-triple-output (DITO) converter with two-stage charging and process-limit cold-start voltage for photovoltaic and thermoelectric energy harvesting. ISSCC Dig. Tech. Papers, Feb. 2016, pp 368–70. Lu Y, Yao S, Shao B, Brokaw P. A 200nA single inductor dual-input-triple-output (DITO) converter with two-stage charging and process-limit cold-start voltage for photovoltaic and thermoelectric energy harvesting. ISSCC Dig. Tech. Papers, Feb. 2016, pp 368–70.
3.
go back to reference Cornett J, Lane B, Dunham M, Asheghi M, Goodson K, Gao Y, Sun N, Chen B. Chip-scale thermal energy harvester using Bi2Te3. IECON 2015-Yokahama, 41st Annual Conference of the IEEE Industrial Electronics Society, 2015, pp. 3326–9. Cornett J, Lane B, Dunham M, Asheghi M, Goodson K, Gao Y, Sun N, Chen B. Chip-scale thermal energy harvester using Bi2Te3. IECON 2015-Yokahama, 41st Annual Conference of the IEEE Industrial Electronics Society, 2015, pp. 3326–9.
6.
go back to reference Shin A, Radhakrishna U, Yang Y, Zhang Q, Gu L, Riehl P, Chandrakasan AP, Lang JH. A MEMS magnetic-based vibration energy harvester. Power MEMS Proceedings, 2017, pp. 363–6. Shin A, Radhakrishna U, Yang Y, Zhang Q, Gu L, Riehl P, Chandrakasan AP, Lang JH. A MEMS magnetic-based vibration energy harvester. Power MEMS Proceedings, 2017, pp. 363–6.
7.
go back to reference Beeby S, Tudor M, White N. Energy harvesting vibration sources for microsystems applications. Meas Sci Technol. 2006;17:175–95.CrossRef Beeby S, Tudor M, White N. Energy harvesting vibration sources for microsystems applications. Meas Sci Technol. 2006;17:175–95.CrossRef
8.
go back to reference Lien IC, Shu YC, Wu WJ, Shiu SM, Lin HC. Revisit of series-SSHI with comparison to other interface circuits in piezoelectric energy harvesting. Smart Mater Struct. 2010;19:125009–20.CrossRef Lien IC, Shu YC, Wu WJ, Shiu SM, Lin HC. Revisit of series-SSHI with comparison to other interface circuits in piezoelectric energy harvesting. Smart Mater Struct. 2010;19:125009–20.CrossRef
9.
go back to reference Guyomar D, Badel A, Lefeuvre E, Richard C. Toward energy harvesting using active materials and conversion improvement by nonlinear processing. IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control. 2005;52(4):584–95.CrossRef Guyomar D, Badel A, Lefeuvre E, Richard C. Toward energy harvesting using active materials and conversion improvement by nonlinear processing. IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control. 2005;52(4):584–95.CrossRef
10.
go back to reference Ramadass Y, Chandraksan A. An efficient piezoelectric energy harvesting interface circuit using a bias-flip rectifier and shared inductor. IEEE J Solid State Circuits. 2010;45(1):189–204.CrossRef Ramadass Y, Chandraksan A. An efficient piezoelectric energy harvesting interface circuit using a bias-flip rectifier and shared inductor. IEEE J Solid State Circuits. 2010;45(1):189–204.CrossRef
11.
go back to reference Lefeuvre E, Badel A, Richard C, Guyomar D. Piezoelectric energy harvesting device optimization by synchronous electric charge extraction. J Intell Mater Syst Struct. 2005;16(10):865–76.CrossRef Lefeuvre E, Badel A, Richard C, Guyomar D. Piezoelectric energy harvesting device optimization by synchronous electric charge extraction. J Intell Mater Syst Struct. 2005;16(10):865–76.CrossRef
12.
go back to reference Hsieh P-H, Chen C-H, Chen H-C. Improving the scavenged power of nonlinear piezoelectric energy harvesting interface at off-resonance by introducing switching delay. IEEE Trans Power Electron. 2015;30(6):3142–55.CrossRef Hsieh P-H, Chen C-H, Chen H-C. Improving the scavenged power of nonlinear piezoelectric energy harvesting interface at off-resonance by introducing switching delay. IEEE Trans Power Electron. 2015;30(6):3142–55.CrossRef
Metadata
Title
Introduction to Energy Harvesting Transducers and Their Power Conditioning Circuits
Author
Baoxing Chen
Copyright Year
2019
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97870-3_1