This application claims the benefit of European Patent Application No. 18175682.6 filed on Jun. 4, 2018, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a field of thermoelectric energy generators that convert heat flux into electric energy.
A thermoelectric generator (TEG) is a solid state device that employs temperature gradient in harvesting electric energy. A typical use case has been to employ a TEG in converting waste heat into electrical energy to charge a battery or for another purpose. Design of the TEG configuration is crucial in the sense that the heat flux tends to reduce the temperature gradient which causes reduction in efficiency of the TEG.
The present invention is defined by the subject matter of the independent claim.
Embodiments are defined in the dependent claims.
According to an aspect, there is provided a sensor structure comprising: a housing arranged to be attached to a body; a thermoelectric generator element comprised in the housing and configured to convert temperature gradient into electric energy; a heat collecting surface coupled to the housing on a side arranged to face a skin when the body is coupled to a user of the sensor structure; a heat conduction channel coupled between the heat collecting surface and the thermoelectric generator element, wherein a cross-sectional area of the heat conduction channel is smaller than the heat collecting surface; and a heat sink coupled to the housing on a side arranged to face away from the skin when the body is coupled to the user.
In the following the invention will be described in greater detail by means of preferred embodiments with reference to an accompanying drawings in which:
The following embodiments are exemplifying. Although the specification may refer to “an”, “one”, or “some” embodiment(s) in several locations of the text, this does not necessarily mean that each reference is made to the same embodiment(s), or that a particular feature only applies to a single embodiment. Single features of different embodiments may also be combined to provide other embodiments.
The sensor structure further comprises a thermoelectric generator (TEG) element 120 comprised in the housing 100 and configured to convert temperature gradient into electric energy. The sensor structure further comprises a heat collecting surface 102 coupled to the housing 100 on a side arranged to face a skin when the body is attached to the user, e.g. worn by a user. A heat conduction channel 104 is coupled between the heat collecting surface 102 and the TEG element 120, and the heat conduction channel is dimensioned such that a cross-sectional area of the heat conduction channel is smaller than the heat collecting surface 102, as illustrated in
A heat sink 112 is coupled to the housing on a side arranged to face away from the skin when the body is coupled with the user, e.g. the garment is worn by the user. The heat sink is coupled to the TEG element such that the heat sink conducts heat away from a cold side of the TEG element and dissipates the heat into air.
The housing 100 is attached to the body 110 such that the body surrounds the heat conducting channel 104 and provides thermal insulation between the heat collecting surface 102 and the heat sink 112. The heat conducting channel 104 may be arranged through a hole in the body, and the heat collecting surface 102 may have a larger diameter or area than a diameter or area of the hole in the body.
The heat conducting channel may be understood as a physical element that separates the hot plate of the TEG element 120 from the heat collecting surface 102. With the provision of the cross-sectional area smaller than the heat collecting surface, less heat is directed from the heat collecting surface to the cold plate of the TEG element, thus maintaining higher temperature gradient between the hot plate and cold plate of the TEG element. Thermal isolation surrounding the heat conducting channel further reduces the amount of heat conducting from the heat collecting surface to the cold plate of the TEG element, as described in the embodiments below.
As illustrated in
Heat flux is illustrated in
In an embodiment, at least one insulation layer 114 is provided between the heat collecting surface 102 and the heat sink 112 and surrounding the heat conducting channel 104. As illustrated in
Since the housing comprising the TEG element is built mainly on the side of the body facing the air, the heat dissipation may be improved and the delivery of the heat flux to the hot side of the TEG element may be controlled through the heat conducting channel by using the body as the further insulation layer. The dimensions of the heat collecting surface, heat conducting channel, and the insulation layer 114 may be designed to provide improved directed heat flux from the heat collecting surface to the hot side of the TEG element. This will allow efficient heat flux from the cold side to the heat sink 112 such that the thermal gradient at the TEG element may be improved.
Skin temperature is typically about 34 degrees Celsius when the user is at rest, while the temperature at the heat sink 112 may be room temperature or slightly higher because of the heat flux, at around 25 degrees Celsius. The achievable temperature gradient for the TEG element may be between 4 and 9 degrees Celsius which would provide approximately 320 to 720 micro Watts (uW) power per square centimetre (cm2). Such power is sufficient for low-power sensors.
The housing 100 may be attached to the body 110 with a snap-on connector. For example, the housing may comprise one counterpart of the snap-on connector, and the heat collecting surface 102 may be comprised in another counterpart of the snap-on connector. The interface of the snap-on connector may be provided at an end or in the heat conducting channel 104, for example.
The material of the heat collecting surface and the heat conducting channel should be made of material capable of efficiently transferring heat to the TEG element. The material of the heat collecting surface may be thermally conductive metal, plastic or adhesive, for example. The material of the heat conducting channel may be thermally conductive metal, plastic or adhesive, for example.
In an embodiment, the electric signal acquired by using the TEG element 120 is used to charge a battery or another energy storage comprised in the housing. The stored energy may be used for electric functions of the sensor arrangement. Let us describe such functions next.
In an embodiment, the sensor arrangement comprises a sensor head 125 on the heat collecting surface 102, a measurement circuitry 130 configured to process a measurement signal acquired by using the sensor head 125, and a signal line (not shown) coupling the sensor head with the measurement circuitry through the body 110. The signal line or lines may travel through the same hole as the heat conducting channel 104, or a separate route may be provided for the signal line(s). Depending on the capabilities of the sensor arrangement, the measurement circuitry 130 may perform various signal processing functions. The measurement circuitry may, for example, comprise a differential amplifier for an electrocardiogram (ECG) sensor head, an optical signal processing circuitry for a photoplethysmogram (PPG) sensor head, etc. In an embodiment, at least a part of the measurement circuitry may be comprised in the sensor head 125, e.g. the sensor head coupled to the heat collecting surface may comprise one or more integrated circuits of the measurement circuitry, e.g. the differential amplifier.
The housing 100 may further house a wireless communication circuitry providing the sensor arrangement wireless communication capability. The wireless communication circuitry may be configured to support one or more wireless communication protocols such as Bluetooth®, Bluetooth Low Energy, or ANT. The wireless communication circuitry may be configured to wirelessly transmit measurement data processed by the measurement circuitry.
In an embodiment, the material of the heat collecting surface is arranged to have electrically conductive properties in addition to the thermal conduction capabilities. In such embodiments, the heat collecting surface may be configured to function as an electrode of an electric sensor head 125, e.g. an ECG and/or bioimpedance electrode.
In an embodiment, the measurement circuitry is configured to perform at least two different types of measurements by using the heat collecting surface as the electrode of the sensor head. The at least two different types of measurements may comprise at least two of the following measurements: electrocardiogram measurement, galvanic skin response measurement, and bioimpedance measurement. In an embodiment, the heat collecting surface comprises two or more separate surfaces electrically isolated from one another. Then, one surface may function as a first electrode while the other surface(s) function as further electrode(s). The surfaces may be electrically isolated but thermally connected to each other by suitable selection of materials on the heat collecting surface. In another embodiment, the heat collecting surface may comprises only one electrode but the measurement circuitry may comprise a switching circuitry configured to switch the measurement function of the electrode. For example, the electrode may be used for ECG and bioimpedance measurements, and the switching circuitry may connect the electrode to different circuits of the measurement circuitry, depending on the selection of the measurement function.
In an embodiment where the sensor arrangement comprises the ECG sensor head and the PPG sensor head, both sensor heads may be comprised in the heat collecting surface. The measurement circuitry may then be configured to receive and process measurement signals received from the ECG sensor head and the PPG sensor head and to compute a pulse transit time (PTT) of a heart pulse from the measurement signals. The PTT correlates with velocity of the heart pulse between two measurement locations. A timing when the heart pulse is measured by the ECG sensor represents the timing of the heart pulse at the heart. The timing of the heart pulse detected by the PPG sensor represents the timing of the heart pulse at the measurement location of the PPG sensor head. The time difference between the two timings represents the PTT between the two locations. Blood pressure, for example, may be computed from the PTT by the measurement circuitry by using the sensor arrangement described herein.
In an embodiment, the sensor arrangement comprises a further electrode arranged on the same side of the body as the heat sink, and a signal line may connect the further electrode to the measurement circuitry. In such an embodiment, the electrode in the sensor head of the heat collecting surface may function as a ground for the ECG measurement, and the further electrode may be the measurement electrode, or vice versa. The user may perform instant measurement of the heart rate, for example, by bringing a finger on the further electrode. For the purpose of continuous heart rate measurement, the measurement circuitry may be coupled to a further electrode contacting the user's skin on the same side of the body as the heat collecting surface. The further electrode may in this case be provided at a suitable distance from the sensor head 125 to provide sufficient grounding. A signal line may lead from the further electrode to the measurement circuitry through the body 110. The signal line may be integrated into the body.
In the embodiments described above, the heat collecting surface faces the skin and the heat sink is provided on the side of the body that faces the air. In another embodiment, the hot side and the cold side is flipped.
The insulation layers 114 may be formed between the body 114 and the heat conducting channel 104. The body may be a wrist strap in this embodiment. However, the insulation layers 114 may also be omitted in other embodiments.
The embodiments described above are suitable for a sensor arrangement for use in physical training, for example, when the sensor arrangement is worn by the user. The housing is small enough that it can be worn without effort and coupled to the body such that it will sustain during intensive exercises. The housing may be made waterproof. It will be obvious to a person skilled in the art that, as the technology advances, the inventive concept can be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are not limited to the examples described above but may vary within the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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18175682.6 | Jun 2018 | EP | regional |