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19 December 2018

Piezoelectric MEMS Energy Harvesters for Powering Sensor Systems †

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1
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Materials Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
2
DGIST-ETH Microrobot Research Center, Daegu-Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology (DGIST), Daegu 42988, Korea
3
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA
4
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Penn State, University Park, PA 16802, USA
This article belongs to the Proceedings EUROSENSORS 2018
For distributed sensing, local power sources are of interest. This is likely to become a progressively more critical problem as the internet of things increases the number of emplaced sensors. This paper will describe energy scavenging using piezoelectric energy harvesters. In this application, a large volume of piezoelectric material with a high figure of merit is essential to obtain a higher power density. The work describes the growth of highly (001) oriented sputtered PZT films (f ~ 0.99) exceeding 4 μm in thickness on both sides of a Ni foil to produce a bimorph structure. These films were incorporated in novel resonant and non-resonant harvesters. Novel non-resonant wrist-worn energy harvesters were designed and constructed (<16 cm2) in which beams are plucked magnetically using an eccentric rotor with embedded magnets to implement frequency up-conversion. The resulting devices successfully convert low frequency vibration sources (i.e., from walking, rotating the wrist, and jogging) to higher frequency vibrations of the PZT beams (100~200 Hz). Measured at resonance, six beams produce an output of 1.2 mW was achieved at a 0.15 G acceleration. For magnetic plucking of a wristworn non-resonant device, 40~50 μW power during mild activity.
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