Abstract

Abstract Energy harvesters and almost all energy generation devices receive the motivation for design from their efficiency and efficiency play an important role in the feasibility and practicability of the design. In this paper, we investigate the efficiency of electromagnetic vibration-based energy harvesters at various electrical loads. In our problem the efficiency depends on excitation frequency, coil and load parameters as well as electromagnetic coupling coefficient. The author first proves that the input power that the harvester receives from its environment at constant base acceleration and constant excitation frequency is always equal to the power that consumes in electrical and mechanical dampers, then the author defines the resonance frequency and plot three efficiency diagrams i.e. plot of efficiency versus (excitation) frequency, plot of maximum efficiency at a constant frequency versus load and in the end plot of the efficiency versus output power at varying load capacitance and resistance. The author observes that maximum efficiency not only does not occur at resonance (i.e. at maximum power) but also is very low (less than 1e−10%) for typical parameters at resonance. Also the maximum efficiency for typical optimum parameters is around 17.45%.

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