Title :
23.5 An energy pile-up resonance circuit extracting maximum 422% energy from piezoelectric material in a dual-source energy-harvesting interface
Author :
Young-Sub Yuk ; Seungchul Jung ; Hui-Dong Gwon ; Sukhwan Choi ; Si Duk Sung ; Tae-Hwang Kong ; Sung-Wan Hong ; Jun-Han Choi ; Min-Yong Jeong ; Jong-Pil Im ; Seung-Tak Ryu ; Gyu-Hyeong Cho
Author_Institution :
KAIST, Daejeon, South Korea
Abstract :
Energy harvesting is one of the key technologies used to realize self-sustaining systems such as wireless sensor networks and health-care devices. Much research on circuit design has been conducted to extract as much energy as possible from transducers, such as the thermoelectric generator (TEG) and the piezoelectric transducer (PZT). Specifically, the energy in a PZT could be extracted more efficiently by utilizing resonance as [1] and [2] demonstrated. However, the maximum output voltage swing in those techniques are limited to twice of the original swing of the PZT, and thus, had a limited energy extraction capability in spite of more energy being available from the PZT. In [3], on the other hand, the large energy is obtained with higher voltage swing, but is limited up to 247% because the load energy is used to increase the output voltage swing of PZT. To obtain far more power from PZT, we propose an alternative resonance technique through which the PZT output swing can be boosted as high as CMOS devices can sustain. This technique is applied to a dual-energy-sourced (PZT and TEG) energy-harvesting interface (EHI) as a battery charger.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; energy harvesting; piezoelectric materials; piezoelectric transducers; CMOS devices; EHI; PZT output swing; TEG; battery charger; circuit design; dual-energy-sourced energy-harvesting interface; dual-source energy-harvesting interface; energy extraction capability; energy pile-up resonance circuit; health-care devices; maximum output voltage swing; piezoelectric material; piezoelectric transducer; resonance technique; self-sustaining systems; thermoelectric generator; voltage swing; wireless sensor networks; Capacitors; Detectors; Energy harvesting; Inductors; Logic gates; Power generation; Switching circuits;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers (ISSCC), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0918-6
DOI :
10.1109/ISSCC.2014.6757488