Abstract

Flow-induced oscillations widely exist in pipelines, fluid machinery, aerospace, and large-span flexible engineering structures. An inherent energy conversion mechanism can be developed for fluid kinetic energy utilization or acoustic energy harvesting. Fluid-resonant acoustic oscillation is featured by stability, easy operation, and a simple mechanical structure. Acoustic oscillation has high intensity and a mono-frequency, which is beneficial for energy harvesting. A simple cavity with appropriate structural dimensions that can induce fluid-resonant oscillations is set and combined with piezoelectric technology to generate electric power. The energy conversion mechanism is studied numerically and experimentally. The effects of flow velocity on the acoustic frequency, the pressure amplitude, and the output voltage of piezoelectric transducer are analyzed. A stable standing wave acoustic field can be generated in the cavity in a certain range of flow velocity. The results show that the higher intensity acoustic field occurs in the first acoustic mode and the first hydraulic mode and can be obtained in the range of flow velocity 27.1–51.1 m/s when the cavity length is 190 mm. A standing wave acoustic field occurs with a frequency of 490 Hz and a maximum pressure amplitude of 15.34 kPa. The open circuit output voltage can reach 0.286 V using a preliminary transducer. The device designed based on this method has a simple structure and no moving parts. It can harvest the fluid kinetic energy that widely exists in pipelines, engineering facilities, air flow forming around transportation tools, and the natural environment. Its energy output can be provided for the self-powered supply system of low-power sensor nodes in wireless sensor networks.

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