Abstract

As a new technology for high-entropy energy harvesting, a triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG) has broad applications in sensor networks and internet of things as a power source, but its average power density is limited by the fixed low-frequency output. Here, a frequency-multiplication TENG based on intrinsic high frequency of tuning fork is proposed which enables converting low-frequency mechanical energy into high-frequency electric energy. A tuning-fork TENG is used to systematically study the effects of intrinsic frequency, dielectric's thickness, and gap distance on its electric performance, and a total transferred charges of 4.3µC and an average power density of 9.42mWm-2 are realized at the triggering frequency of 0.2Hz, which are 71 times and 5.7 times than that of the single-cycle output of conventional contact-separation TENG, respectively. Moreover, the crest factor also decreases from 3.5 to around 1.5. Then, a homemade tuning fork-like TENG is reasonably designed for harvesting ambient wind energy, achieving an average power density of 20.02mWm-2 at a wind speed of 7ms-1 . Specially, its impedance resistance is independent of the mechanical triggering frequency, simplifying the back-end power management circuit design. Therefore, the frequency-multiplication TENG shows a great potential for efficient distributed energy harvesting.

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