• DocumentCode
    1363141
  • Title

    A 2- \\mu m BiCMOS Rectifier-Free AC–DC Piezoelectric Energy Harvester-Charger IC

  • Author

    Dongwon Kwon ; Rincon-Mora, G.A.

  • Author_Institution
    Georgia Tech Analog, Power, & Energy IC Res. Lab., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
  • Volume
    4
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2010
  • Firstpage
    400
  • Lastpage
    409
  • Abstract
    A fundamental problem that miniaturized systems, such as biomedical implants, face is limited space for storing energy, which translates to short operational life. Harvesting energy from the surrounding environment, which is virtually a boundless source at these scales, can overcome this restriction, if losses in the system are sufficiently low. To that end, the 2-μm bi-complementary metal-oxide semiconductor switched-inductor piezoelectric harvester prototype evaluated and presented in this paper eliminates the restrictions associated with a rectifier to produce and channel 30 μW from a periodic 72- μW piezoelectric source into a battery directly. In doing so, the circuit also increases the system´s electrical damping force to draw more power and energy from the transducer, effectively increasing its mechanical-electrical efficiency by up to 78%. The system also harnesses up to 659 nJ from nonperiodic mechanical vibrations, which are more prevalent in the environment, with 6.1±1.5% to 8.8±6.9% of end-to-end mechanical-electrical efficiency.
  • Keywords
    BiCMOS integrated circuits; battery chargers; bioMEMS; energy harvesting; piezoelectric semiconductors; 2-μm bi-complementary metal-oxide semiconductor; BiCMOS rectifier-free AC-DC piezoelectric energy harvester-charger IC; biomedical implant; electrical damping force; energy harvesting; mechanical-electrical efficiency; miniaturized system; nonperiodic mechanical vibration; power 72 muW; size 2 mum; switched-inductor piezoelectric harvester prototype; Batteries; Body sensor networks; Energy harvesting; Implantable biomedical devices; Microsensors; Piezoelectric devices; Vibrations; Battery charger; biomedical implant; body-sensor network; energy harvesting; harvester; piezoelectric; rectifier free; switched-inductor converter; vibration; wireless microsensor;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1932-4545
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBCAS.2010.2077288
  • Filename
    5611629