The invention is related to the field of energy harvesting, and in particular to improving energy harvesting efficiency of piezoelectric harvesters.
Energy harvesting is an area of growing importance to reduce the dependence of handheld, portable and implantable electronics on batteries. Harvesting ambient vibration energy through piezoelectric means is a popular energy harvesting technique which can supply 100's of μW of available power. A piezoelectric element converts mechanical energy in the form of vibrations into electrical energy and vice-versa. It can be modeled as a current source in parallel with a complex impedance.
Ambient mechanical vibrations produce an AC current in the piezoelectric element which must be rectified to get a DC voltage output. Conventional rectifiers use a full-bridge rectifier 2 or a voltage doubler 10 circuit as shown in
A piezoelectric harvester is usually represented electrically as a current source in parallel with a capacitor (CP) and resistor (RP). The current source provides current proportional to the input vibration amplitude. For the sake of the following analysis, the input vibrations are assumed to be sinusoidal in nature and hence the current is represented as:
IHAR=Ip sin ωt (1)
Some of the prior art in extracting electrical power from piezoelectric harvesters 2, 10 is shown in
where VRECT is the rectified output voltage of the full-bridge rectifier 2. The extracted power varies with the output voltage and reaches a maximum at
where the maximum power extractable is
For the voltage doubler case, while the maximum power extractable remains the same, the output voltage (VRECT) at which this is achieved is twice the value as given by eq. (3).
The main limitation of the full-bridge rectifier 2 is that, most of the current available from the harvester 4 does not go into the output at high voltages. This is because, the current first has to go into the capacitor Cp to charge it up to VRECT before the current can go into the output. This happens every time current changes direction from positive to negative and vice-versa. In each of those occasions, the voltage across Cp has to change from +VRECT to −VRECT or from −VRECT to +VRECT. This loss in charge due to charging and discharging of Cp limits the maximum power that can be extracted using the full-bridge rectifier.
Following the rectifier, additional DC-DC converters are required to regulate the output of the rectifier to its maximum power point and to efficiently transfer the energy obtained to the load circuits. These converters can be inductor-based to achieve high efficiency.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided an energy harvester circuit. The energy harvester circuit includes a harvesting module for extracting energy from an ambient source. A bias flip module manages the manner in which voltage across the harvesting module transitions when input current to the harvesting module changes direction so as to allow a majority of the charge available from the harvesting module to be extracted. A voltage transitioning module is shared amongst one or more DC-DC converters for efficient energy management.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of performing energy harvesting. The method includes providing a harvesting module for extracting energy from an ambient source. Also, the method includes implementing a bias flip module to manage the manner in which voltage across the harvesting module transitions when input current to the harvesting module changes direction so as to allow a majority of the charge available from the harvesting module to be extracted. Furthermore, the method includes implementing a voltage transitioning module that is shared amongst one or more DC-DC converters for efficiency energy management.
The invention provides a circuit technique to improve the energy harvesting efficiency of piezoelectric harvesters. The circuit uses a bias-flip rectifier technique which improves multi-fold, the power extraction capability as compared to conventional full-bridge rectifiers and voltage doublers. The bias-flip rectifier uses an inductor which can be shared with a multiplicity of DC-DC converters on the same energy processing circuit through an arbiter which controls access to the inductor. The circuit can be used in energy harvesting scenarios as a battery life-time enhancer or to completely eliminate the battery altogether. The invention is not limited to piezoelectric harvesters and can be used in general with any input having similar electrical characteristics to a piezoelectric harvester.
The inductor (LBF) operates by flipping in a very efficient manner using the switch ΦBF, the voltage across Cp from +VRECT to −VRECT and vice-versa when the input current changes direction. This way the majority of the charge available from the harvester 22 can go into the output capacitor (CREF) without having to charge and discharge Cp.
All practical piezoelectric harvesters have a parallel resistance Rp. This resistance limits the maximum power achievable. From maximum power transfer theory, this maximum power limit is,
In the presence of the resistor Rp, the power available from a full-bridge rectifier is limited to
which can be re-written as,
where Q=ωRpCp, is the quality factor of the input piezoelectric harvester. This leads to maximum extractable power of,
For the bias-flip rectifier 20 of
which reaches a maximum of
It can be thus seen that, the bias-flip rectifier improves upon the maximum power extractable by a factor of
For a commercial piezoelectric harvester with a Q of 12.8, the bias-flip rectifier 20 can theoretically provide an improvement of 9.15× in extractable power. However, the parasitic resistances associated with inductive charge transfer and the overhead power involved in controlling the bias-flip rectifier circuitry limit the improvement of the extractable power to 6-8×.
The ratio of the power extractable by the bias-flip rectifier 20 compared to the maximum power extractable as predicted by the maximum power transfer theory is given by,
In systems where it is prohibitive to use an inductor to improve power output or when the series resistance of the piezoelectric harvester is high, a switch-only rectifier scheme can be used.
The switch ΦSO helps in discharging the voltage across Cp from ±VRECT to ground when the input current changes direction. This way the charge lost in the full-bridge and voltage doubler cases can be reduced by half. This helps in increasing the power output from the harvester 80 by 2× compared to a full-bridge rectifier or voltage doubler.
The bias-flip rectifier can help improve the power extracted from piezoelectric harvesters by 6-8×. However, it requires the use of an inductor. In the proposed implementation here, this inductor can be the same one used in the many different DC-DC converters present in the system using the arbiter as shown in
Thus, effectively, the inductor (LSHARE) can be time shared between the rectifier 42 and the many different DC-DC converters 44, 46. This is done with the help of the arbiter block 46 as shown in more detail in
The bias-flip switches M1 and M2 are turned ON when the current from the harvester 58 crosses zero. At this point one of the voltages VHAR
In particular,
The gate-drive circuitries 66, 72 include a capacitor CGD which can be implemented on-chip. During phase Φ1 when the bias-flip switches M1 and M2 are OFF, the capacitor CGD gets charged to VHIGH and the gate voltages of both the bias-flip M1 and M2 switches are brought to ground. When IP crosses zero the bias-flipping takes place, phase Φ2 begins, where the voltage across CGD remains almost the same, but the voltage referenced to ground at VG
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to several preferred embodiments thereof, various changes, omissions and additions to the form and detail thereof, may be made therein, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 61/098,873 filed Sep. 22, 2008, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This invention was made with governmental support under Grant Number W15P7T-08-C-P408, awarded by the US Air Force. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61098873 | Sep 2008 | US |