Abstract

AbstractMagneto‐mechano‐electric (MME) energy harvesters (EHs) have emerged as a promising solution for powering Internet of Things (IoT) sensor networks by capturing ambient stray magnetic fields in urban circumstance. Despite significant advancements, achieving milliwatt‐level power generation from extremely weak (<1 Oe) and randomly oriented magnetic fields remains challenging. Drawing inspiration from the configuration of cross‐shaped spider legs, this study introduces an innovative X‐shaped MME‐EH featuring fourfold symmetric architecture with symmetrically distributed magnets at each end, enabling near‐isotropic in‐plane omnidirectional energy harvesting. Under extremely weak magnetic fields 0.75 and 0.3 Oe at 60 Hz, the device achieves a record‐high output power of 7.31 and 1.67 mWRMS, respectively, representing a 362% improvement in normalized power over the state‐of‐the‐art results. The theoretical model attributes these gains to the synergistic enhancement effect of the second bending mode and the dual‐mode structure, collectively improving both magnetomechanical and electromechanical coupling by augmenting the magnetic moments and suppressing the clamp loss. The device further demonstrates robust real‐world applications, efficiently powering a wireless IoT sensor system by harvesting multidirectional magnetic field energy from household appliances. This work opens new avenues for developing efficient multimodal MME‐EHs capable of harnessing omnidirectional, weak magnetic fields for widespread IoT applications.

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