Title :
Harvesting the highest power from tiny electrostatic transducers with CMOS circuits
Author :
Cowan, Joshua J. ; Rincon-Mora, Gabriel A.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract :
Although energy in vibrations is often vast, the electrostatic force with which tiny variable capacitors draw power from motion is miniscule, so output power is low. Thankfully, extracting energy at higher voltages generates more power because the electrical damping force that impedes motion to draw power is stronger. Clamping the transducer to a battery is convenient in this respect, but limiting because battery voltages are low. Using a capacitor to clamp the transducer to a higher voltage is better, but only to the extent that capacitance keeps that voltage from reaching the breakdown level of the switches. In fact, when neglecting parasitic power losses in the switches and the controller, a grounded clamping capacitor can yield up to 100% of the theoretical maximum power, and up to 87% with 2.5 nF, 15-V switches, and a 3.3-V battery from a 30-250-pF transducer at 27.6 Hz. Under similar conditions, this paper also shows that battery-clamped and asynchronous and stacked capacitor-clamped systems generate 4%, 17%, and 53%.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; capacitors; electrostatic devices; energy harvesting; microsensors; microswitches; transducers; CMOS circuits; asynchronous capacitor-clamped systems; battery voltages; battery-clamped systems; breakdown level; capacitance 30 pF to 250 pF; electrical damping force; electrostatic force; energy extraction; frequency 27.6 Hz; grounded clamping capacitor; highest power harvesting; stacked capacitor-clamped systems; tiny electrostatic transducers; tiny variable capacitors; voltage 15 V; voltage 3.3 V; wireless microsensors; Batteries; Capacitors; Clamps; Damping; Electrostatics; Reactive power; Vibrations; Energy-harvesting charger; damping force; electrostatic transducer; maximum output power; switched inductor;
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems (MWSCAS), 2014 IEEE 57th International Midwest Symposium on
Conference_Location :
College Station, TX
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-4134-6
DOI :
10.1109/MWSCAS.2014.6908420