Abstract

Parametric excitation (PE) has widely been employed as a method of mechanical pre-amplification in nonlinear vibration energy harvesting systems. However, despite their advantages, most current PE systems are limited to degenerate parametric operation within a narrow frequency band around the primary instability tongue. In this paper, we simulate and experimentally demonstrate a parametrically driven capacitive electromechanical resonator having multiple electrical degrees of freedom. Multiple modes allow for several frequency bands in which the electrical resonator is driven into nondegenerate (combination) parametric resonance (PR) in addition to degenerate resonance, thereby enabling operation over a broader range of frequencies while maintaining the same mechanical footprint. These frequency bands and PR thresholds are tunable by simply changing the electrical circuit parameters and PR can be achieved in the presence of high mechanical damping making the method more adaptable than purely mechanical approaches. Experimental results are extended by simulations indicating that proper selection of operating parameters can enable the merging of instability tongues to produce a broadband region of PR for elastic wave energy harvesting thereby obtaining superior performance when compared to an equivalent single degree of freedom PE energy harvester.

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