Abstract

In the field of energy harvesting, it has been demonstrated that under the appropriate conditions, nonlinear configurations of the harvester can provide better performance, compared with linear resonant oscillators; the performance is quantified in terms of the amount of energy extracted from environmental mechanical or seismic vibrations. In this paper, the results of investigations on a system for energy harvesting from wideband vibrations, using a nonlinear snap-through-buckling configuration and two piezoelectric actuators, placed at the stable minima of the potential energy function that underpins the dynamics of the flexible beam are presented. A nonlinear model is proposed that can describe the device behavior when it is driven by a suprathreshold deterministic signal, a wideband noise, or a subthreshold signal superimposed onto a (usually bandlimited) noise background. In the latter case, the system is seen to exhibit the so-called “stochastic resonance” behavior. The bandwidth of the nonlinear energy harvester is about 15 Hz, which is compatible with vibrational energy sources at low frequencies, e.g., a walking human. The device is seen to generate power up to $160~\mu \text{W}$ when subject to a noise limited at 15 Hz. The power is sufficient to operate a standard wireless sensor node and the conversion efficiency of the harvester is about 12%.

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