Embodiments of the present invention relate to vibration energy harvesting (or energy scavenging) techniques using an electroactive generator, and an energy rectifier, more particularly, a mechanical frequency rectifier converting low-frequency ambient vibrations into high frequency vibrations.
Energy harvesting (or energy scavenging) is defined as the conversion of ambient mechanical energy, for example, but not limited to, vibrational energy, into usable electrical energy. The electrical energy harvested can then be used as a power source for a variety of low-power applications, such as, but not limited to, remote applications that may involve networked systems of wireless sensors and/or communication nodes, where other power sources such as batteries may be impractical [J. A. Paradiso, T. Starner, IEEE Pervasive Computing, January-March 18-27 (2005); S. Roundy, E. S. Leland, J. Baker, E. Carleton, E. Reilly, E. Lai, B. Otis, J. M. Rabacy, P. K. Wright, IEEE Pervasive Computing, January-March:28-35 (2005)]. For these reasons, the amount of research devoted to power harvesting has been rapidly increasing [H. A. Sodano, D. J. Inman, G. Park, The Shook and Vibration Digest, Vol. 36: 197-205 (2004)].
Vibration-based energy harvesters have been successfully developed using, for example, electromagnetic, electrostatic, and piezoelectric methods of electromechanical generation [S. Roundy, E. S. Leland, J. Baker, E. Carleton, E. Reilly, E. Lai, B. Otis, J. M. Rabacy, P. K. Wright, IEEE Pervasive Computing, January-March: 28-35 (2005)]. A piezoelectric harvester has gained considerable attention because piezoelectric energy conversion produces relatively higher voltage than other electromechanical generators. A piezoelectric harvester can convert mechanical energy into electrical energy by straining a piezoelectric material that then uses atomic deformations to change the polarization of the material and to produce net voltage changes. The net voltage can be scavenged and converted into stored power in either a battery or a capacitor, or it may be used as it is being created.
The amount of power accumulated via the piezoelectric harvester (or generator) is proportional to the mechanical frequency which is exciting it [H. W. Kim, A. Batra, S. Priya, K. Uchino, D. Markley, R. E. Newnham, H. F. Hofmann, The Japan Society of Applied Physics, Vol. 43 9A:6178-6183 (2004)]. In most non-resonant energy generators, the mechanical frequency input to the generator (e.g., piezoelectric material) corresponds to the environment's dominant mechanical frequency, which in most all cases is relatively low (i.e., below 100 Hz). For example, a heel-strike power harvester [N. S. Shenck, J. A. Paradiso, IEEE Micro, Vol. 21:30-41 (2001)], disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,433,465 B1 (Mcknight et al.), harvests energy from a walking motion that occurs at approximately 1 Hz. The frequency of this generator matches the driving frequency of the heel strike. This low frequency generator limits the amount of electromechanical power that can be converted. As a result, the power harvested via the non-resonant generator is insufficient to power most electronic-based systems. Therefore, a relatively small non-resonant generator may, typically, not be able to generate sufficient power due to the low-frequency ambient vibrations.
On the other hand, a resonant piezoelectric generator is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,456,134 (Ko et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 4,900,970 (Ando et al.) and U.S. Pat. No. 6,858,870 B2 (Malkin et al.). For the resonant vibration-based generators, the harvesting power can be maximized when the resonance frequency matches the driving frequency of the ambient vibration source [J. A. Paradiso, T. Starner, IEEE Pervasive Computing, January-March: 18-27 (2005)]. Otherwise, the harvesting power output drops off dramatically as resonance frequency deviates from the driving frequency. To harvest maximum energy, the piezoelectric generator in such systems is designed to exploit the oscillation of a proof mass resonantly tuned to the environment's dominant mechanical frequency [S. Roundy, E. S. Leland, J. Baker, E. Carleton, E. Reilly, E. Laf, B. Otis, J. M. Rabacy, P. K. Wright, IEEE Pervasive Computing, January-March:28-35 (2005)]. The resonance fiequency based harvesting approach limits operation to a very narrow frequency band. Also, because most structural resonance frequencies are small (i.e., below 100 Hz), the amount of power that can be harvested per unit volume per device is limited because power is proportional to input frequency. It is, therefore, desirable to be able to convert a low range mechanical frequency to a higher resonant frequency, given that many piezoelectric materials and magnetostrictive materials are capable of operating at frequencies in the 10's of kHz. This would represent orders of magnitude increases in power harvested per unit of devices.
An objective of the present invention is to provide an approach to rectify a low mechanical frequency to a higher frequency mode. The present invention represents a significant advancement compared to prior energy harvesting designs. The current invention may utilize an inverse frequency rectification approach. The inverse frequency rectification converts a low frequency oscillation source, which may, for example, be from an ambient vibration, to a much higher frequency oscillation. This rectification allows substantially more power per unit mass to be harvested than previously possible. To date all the energy harvesters have relied on the relatively low ambient vibrations and have not used or proposed the feature of inverse frequency rectification. The addition of frequency rectifiers dramatically increases the power output per unit volume. The inverse frequency rectification approach can potentially generate power densities on the order of W/cm3 levels, two to three orders of magnitude larger than currently obtainable by conventional piezoelectric energy harvesters.
The rectified frequency may be applied to an electro-mechanical or magneto-mechanical material to convert the mechanical power into electrical power. By using an electro-mechanical material a voltage-based harvesting system may be obtained, while by using a magneto-mechanical material a current-based harvesting system may be obtained.
An energy harvesting apparatus according to an embodiment of the invention includes an inverse frequency rectifier structured to receive mechanical energy at a first frequency, and a solid state electromechanical transducer coupled to the inverse frequency rectifier to receive a force provided by the inverse frequency rectifier. The force, when provided by the inverse frequency rectifier, causes the solid state transducer to be subjected to a second frequency that is higher than the first frequency to thereby generate electrical power. A system according to embodiments of the invention may comprise the above-described apparatus, as well as an electrical device coupled to receive the electrical signal. Embodiments of the invention may also include methods of implementing the above-described apparatus.
Additional features of this invention are provided in the following detailed description of various embodiments of the invention with reference to the drawings. Furthermore, the above-discussed and other attendant advantages of the present invention will become better understood by reference to the detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
An inverse frequency rectification may be provided in accordance with embodiments of the present invention to generate higher resonant frequency vibration without changing the generator design for resonance-tuning. Given this, it may be advantageous to have a single design that operates effectively over a range of vibration frequencies. The following detailed description sets forth examples of embodiments of the current invention that are a few of the many considered possible for this invention, and as such, the description is regarded as disclosing representative examples. Other harvesting supports are not necessary for an understanding of the invention and are not illustrated. In other instances, well known features have not been described in detail so as to unnecessarily obscure the present invention. The figures illustrating various embodiments of the present invention are not drawn to scale.
As discussed above, the above embodiments are shown in the figures using an inverse frequency rectification scheme in which a bar or other surface having transversely mounted tooth-like rectifiers is vibrated such that the rectifiers cause a flexible, displaceable structure to repeatedly be excited into vibration. However, the invention is not intended to be thus limited. Rather the invention is intended to encompass any known or as yet to be discovered inverse frequency rectification method or device, circular, linear, or otherwise (for example, an alternative structure may use gears to achieve inverse frequency rectification in a circular fashion; another alternative structure may utilize a rack-and-pinion-based system to achieve a continuous non-discrete system).
A system like that of
The invention has been described in detail with respect to various embodiments, and it will now be apparent from the foregoing to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention in its broader aspects, and the invention, therefore, as defined in the claims is intended to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2006/036708 | 9/21/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/31/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60719565 | Sep 2005 | US |