Title :
Energy harvesting study on single and multilayer ferroelectret foams under compressive force
Author :
Zhenhua Luo ; Dibin Zhu ; Junjie Shi ; Beeby, Steve ; Chunhong Zhang ; Proynov, Plamen ; Stark, Bernard
Author_Institution :
Electron. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Abstract :
Cellular polypropylene (PP) ferro electret is a thin and flexible cellular polymer foam that generates electrical power under mechanical force. This work investigates single and multilayer ferro electret PP foams and their potential to supply energy for human-body-worn sensors. Human foot-fall is emulated using an electrodynamic instrument, allowing applied compressive force and momentum to be correlated with energy output. Peak power, output pulse duration, and energy per strike is derived experimentally as a function of force and momentum, and shown to be a strong function of external load resistance, thus providing a clear maximum energy point. The possibility of increasing pulse time and reducing voltage to CMOS compatible levels at some expense of peak power is shown. To further increase the output power, multilayer ferro electret is presented. The synchronized power generation of each layer is studied and illustrated using simulation, and results are supported by experiments. Finally, the energy output of single-layer and multi-layer ferro electrets are compared by charging a capacitor via a rectifier. A ten-layer ferro electret is shown to have charging ability 29.1 times better than that of the single-layer ferro electret. It demonstrates energy output that is capable of powering the start-up and transmission of a typical low-power wireless sensor chipset.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; body sensor networks; electrodynamics; energy harvesting; ferroelectric devices; piezoelectric devices; polymer foams; CMOS compatible levels; cellular polymer foam; cellular polypropylene ferro electret; compressive force; electrical power generation; electrodynamic instrument; energy harvesting; energy per strike; external load resistance; human foot-fall emulation; human-body-worn sensors; increase pulse time; low-power wireless sensor chipset; maximum energy point; mechanical force; momentum; multilayer ferro electret PP foams; output pulse duration; peak power; single layer ferro electret PP foams; voltage reduction; Energy harvesting; Force; Immune system; Instruments; Legged locomotion; Nonhomogeneous media; Voltage measurement; Ferroelectret; compressive force; energy harvesting; multilayer; polypropylene (PP); single layer;
Journal_Title :
Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TDEI.2015.7116323