Author_Institution :
Inst. Super. de Eng. de Lisboa (ADEETC-ISEL-IPL), UNINOVA, Lisbon, Portugal
Abstract :
A start-up circuit, used in a micro-power indoor light energy harvesting system, is described. This start-up circuit achieves two goals: first, to produce a reset signal, power-on-reset (POR), for the energy harvesting system, and secondly, to temporarily shunt the output of the photovoltaic (PV) cells, to the output node of the system, which is connected to a capacitor. This capacitor is charged to a suitable value, so that a voltage step-up converter starts operating, thus increasing the output voltage to a larger value than the one provided by the PV cells. A prototype of the circuit was manufactured in a 130 nm CMOS technology, occupying an area of only 0.019 mm2. Experimental results demonstrate the correct operation of the circuit, being able to correctly start-up the system, even when having an input as low as 390 mV using, in this case, an estimated energy of only 5.3 pJ to produce the start-up.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; capacitors; energy harvesting; power convertors; solar cells; CMOS technology; PV cells; capacitor; low-power indoor light energy harvesting; micropower indoor light energy harvesting system; photovoltaic cells; power-on-reset; start-up circuit; voltage 390 mV; voltage step-up converter;