DocumentCode :
1356487
Title :
Low-Power Design of a Self-powered Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting System With Maximum Power Point Tracking
Author :
Kong, Na ; Ha, Dong Sam
Author_Institution :
Bradley Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA
Volume :
27
Issue :
5
fYear :
2012
fDate :
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2298
Lastpage :
2308
Abstract :
A low-power energy harvesting system targeting to harvest several milliwatts from vibration is presented in this paper. Several low-power design schemes to reduce power dissipation of the proposed system are described, and sources of power loss are analyzed to improve the power efficiency. A discontinuous conduction mode (DCM) flyback converter with the constant on-time modulation is adopted for our system. The DCM operation of a flyback converter is chosen as for maximum power point tracking (MPPT) to be implemented with a single current sensor. The constant on-time modulation lowers the clock frequency of the controller by more than an order of magnitude for our system, which reduces the dynamic power dissipation of the controller. MPPT, executed by a microcontroller unit (MCU), is achieved through dynamic resistive matching, and the MPPT is executed at intermittent time intervals due to a relatively slow change of the operating condition. When MPPT is not active, the MCU operates at a lower clock frequency to save power. Experimental results indicate that the proposed system harvests up to 8.4 mW power under 0.5-g base acceleration with four parallel piezoelectric cantilevers and achieves 72% power efficiency around the resonant frequency of 47 Hz.
Keywords :
cantilevers; electric sensing devices; energy conservation; energy harvesting; low-power electronics; maximum power point trackers; microcontrollers; piezoelectric devices; DCM flyback converter; MCU; MPPT; clock frequency; constant on-time modulation; current sensor; discontinuous conduction mode flyback converter; dynamic power dissipation reduction; dynamic resistive matching; low-power design; low-power energy harvesting system; maximum power point tracking; microcontroller unit; parallel piezoelectric cantilevers; power efficiency; power loss; self-powered piezoelectric energy harvesting system; Energy harvesting; Generators; Impedance; Impedance matching; Power dissipation; Vibrations; Wireless sensor networks; Impedance matching; piezoelectric transducers; power conditioning; power conversion; pulse frequency modulation;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-8993
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2011.2172960
Filename :
6056568
Link To Document :
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