Title :
A voltage-multiplying self-powered ac/dc converter with 0.35 V minimum input voltage for energy harvesting applications
Author :
Cheng, Shuo ; Sathe, Rutvik ; Natarajan, Raj D. ; Arnold, David P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
Abstract :
This paper demonstrates a highly efficient, low-voltage ac/dc converter using a voltage multiplier (octupler) circuit architecture intended for vibrational energy harvesting applications where a low-voltage ac waveform is used to charge a battery. The circuit employs output-powered active diodes and does not require any external power supply or startup circuitry. The circuit rectifies and boosts input ac voltages in the range of 0.35-2 V and 20-500 Hz to a dc voltage output that is ~8 times higher than the input amplitude. The circuit can cold-start from an input voltage of 0.5 V or higher, providing an output voltage sufficient to charge a 3.7 V lithium ion battery. Once started, the circuit can maintain operation at input voltage amplitudes as low as 0.35 V. Over 80% efficiency is achieved from 20 Hz to 100 Hz, with output power ranging from a few microwatts to one milliwatt. Furthermore, in testing with an actual electrodynamic (magnetic) vibrational energy harvester that generates >;0.5 V ac output, the circuit delivers power to a lithium-ion battery with an efficiency of >;80%.
Keywords :
AC-DC power convertors; energy harvesting; secondary cells; voltage multipliers; actual electrodynamic magnetic vibrational energy harvester; external power supply; frequency 20 Hz to 500 Hz; lithium ion battery; low-voltage ac waveform; low-voltage ac/dc converter; octupler circuit architecture; output-powered active diodes; startup circuitry; vibrational energy harvesting applications; voltage 0.35 V to 2 V; voltage 3.7 V; voltage multiplier; voltage-multiplying self-powered AC/DC converter; Batteries; Capacitors; Converters; Energy harvesting; Resistance; Schottky diodes; Voltage measurement;
Conference_Titel :
Applied Power Electronics Conference and Exposition (APEC), 2011 Twenty-Sixth Annual IEEE
Conference_Location :
Fort Worth, TX
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8084-5
DOI :
10.1109/APEC.2011.5744763