DocumentCode :
2994916
Title :
Electrostatic Energy Harvester and Li-Ion Charger Circuit for Micro-Scale Applications
Author :
Torres, Erick O. ; Rincon-Mora, Gabriel A.
Author_Institution :
Georgia Tech Analog & Power IC Design Lab., Atlanta
Volume :
1
fYear :
2006
fDate :
6-9 Aug. 2006
Firstpage :
65
Lastpage :
69
Abstract :
Modern portable micro-systems like biomedical implants and ad-hoc wireless transceiver micro-sensors continue to integrate more functions into smaller devices, which result in low energy levels and short operational lives. Researchers and industry alike are consequently considering harvesting energy from the surrounding environment as a means of offsetting this energy deficit. Even with power efficient designs, low duty-cycle operation, smart power-aware network architectures, and batteries with improved energy density, the stored energy in micro-scale systems is simply not sufficient to sustain extended lifetimes. Fortunately, the surrounding environment is a rich source of energy, from solar and thermal to kinetic, but harnessing it without dissipating much power in the process is challenging. In this paper, an electrostatic vibrational energy harvester circuit is proposed and evaluated. It harnesses energy from inherent vibrations in the system (e.g., engine-powered applications) by modulating the parallel-plate distance of a variable capacitor and channeling the resulting change in charge into a secondary Li-ion micro-battery. The varactor, in essence, behaves like a vibration-dependent current source. Simulations show that a 100-to-1 pF variable plate capacitor subjected to vibrations with a period of 15 mus produces an average harvesting current of 40.8 muA, an energy gain of 569 pj per cycle, and a net average power gain of 38 muW.
Keywords :
electrostatics; lithium; micromechanical devices; secondary cells; varactors; Li-ion charger circuit; current 40.8 muA; electrostatic energy harvester; electrostatic vibrational energy harvester circuit; energy 569 pJ; microscale systems; parallel-plate distance; power 38 muW; secondary Li-ion microbattery; time 15 mus; varactor; variable plate capacitor; Batteries; Capacitors; Circuits; Electrostatics; Engines; Implants; Kinetic theory; Micromechanical devices; Transceivers; Vibrations; Energy harvesting; electrostatic vibration harvester circuit; lithium-ion charger; self-powered; self-sufficient; self-sustaining;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems, 2006. MWSCAS '06. 49th IEEE International Midwest Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Juan
ISSN :
1548-3746
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0172-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1548-3746
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MWSCAS.2006.381996
Filename :
4267073
Link To Document :
بازگشت