Abstract

Though numerous piezoelectric vibration energy harvesters (PVEHs) have been designed and investigated to provide power supply for wireless sensors or wearable devices, it remains a challenge for traditional PVEHs to work effectively in an environment of low frequency, low acceleration and multidirectional vibrations. This work presents a PVEH using a low-frequency energy-capturing resonant system formed by a rolling ball in a hemispherical shell and driven by a rope. Due to the symmetry of the sphere, the ball can be excited at multiple directions in 3D space, and the piezoelectric beam can be pulled by the ball through a rope in multiple directions. Thus, the efficient multidirectional energy harvesting under low frequency (<10 Hz) and ultralow intensity (<0.1 g) vibrations could be realized. A mass-spring-damper equivalent model was built to understand the operation mechanism of the proposed PVEH. The results show that the proposed PVEH has a potential to collect energy in any direction in 3D space, and could achieve a good angle bandwidth with 360° for ϕ and 240° for β under the excitation of a = 0.04 g, f = 6.8 Hz with the acceleration defined in the spherical coordinate system. The developed PVEH can generate 6.5 μW under a low-intensity excitation (0.03 g), and the normalized power density can reach 22.63 μW/(cm3 g 2Hz). Moreover, the minimum start-up acceleration analysis of the proposed PVEH indicates that the PVEH can capture multidirectional energy from vibrations as low as 0.01 g. In addition, both simulation and experimental study on rope redundancy and ball mass show that they can be used to adjust the device performance easily without structure re-fabrication. Overall, this study demonstrates a new mechanism that could effectively harvest low frequency, ultralow intensity and multidirectional vibration energy.

Full Text
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