DocumentCode
1164485
Title
Design of a Solar-Harvesting Circuit for Batteryless Embedded Systems
Author
Brunelli, Davide ; Moser, Clemens ; Thiele, Lothar ; Benini, Luca
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electron., Comput. Sci. & Syst. (DEIS), Univ. of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Volume
56
Issue
11
fYear
2009
Firstpage
2519
Lastpage
2528
Abstract
The limited battery lifetime of modern embedded systems and mobile devices necessitates frequent battery recharging or replacement. Solar energy and small-size photovoltaic (PV) systems are attractive solutions to increase the autonomy of embedded and personal devices attempting to achieve perpetual operation. We present a battery less solar-harvesting circuit that is tailored to the needs of low-power applications. The harvester performs maximum-power-point tracking of solar energy collection under nonstationary light conditions, with high efficiency and low energy cost exploiting miniaturized PV modules. We characterize the performance of the circuit by means of simulation and extensive testing under various charging and discharging conditions. Much attention has been given to identify the power losses of the different circuit components. Results show that our system can achieve low power consumption with increased efficiency and cheap implementation. We discuss how the scavenger improves upon state-of-the-art technology with a measured power consumption of less than 1 mW. We obtain increments of global efficiency up to 80%, diverging from ideality by less than 10%. Moreover, we analyze the behavior of super capacitors. We find that the voltage across the supercapacitor may be an unreliable indicator for the stored energy under some circumstances, and this should be taken into account when energy management policies are used.
Keywords
embedded systems; energy harvesting; energy management systems; low-power electronics; photovoltaic cells; secondary cells; supercapacitors; batteryless embedded system; batteryless solar-harvesting circuit design; energy management policies; energy scavenger; frequent battery recharging; frequent battery replacement; harvester performance; limited battery lifetime; low power consumption; maximum-power-point tracking; miniaturized PV module; mobile devices; nonstationary light condition; perpetual operation; personal devices; small-size photovoltaic system; solar energy collection; state-of-the-art technology; supercapacitor behavior; DC–DC power conversion; embedded systems; energy harvesting; maximum-power-point tracking (MPPT); photovoltaic (PV) cells; power supply; wireless sensor networks (WSNs);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1549-8328
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCSI.2009.2015690
Filename
4785219
Link To Document