TY - JOUR
T1 - A Study on Piezoelectric Energy-Harvesting Wireless Sensor Networks Deployed in a Weak Vibration Environment
AU - Han, Yanhui
AU - Feng, Yue
AU - Yu, Zejie
AU - Lou, Wenzhong
AU - Liu, Huicong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2001-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2017/10/15
Y1 - 2017/10/15
N2 - Wireless sensor network (WSN) is an interestingly promising technology with many applications in intelligent environment-monitoring. Its energy consumption is, however, essentially challenged after it is deployed. In this paper, we developed a low-resonant-frequency piezoelectric energy harvesting device as an alternative to power WSN deployed in a weak vibration environment. An energy management module, equipped with a full-bridge rectifier (FBR), a fully self-powered voltage controller, and a logic-level protection circuit was designed to enable a regulated voltage to intermittently drive WSN for temperature monitoring. The power transfer efficiency of FBR reached 42%, presenting a good performance/cost ratio in the case of a relatively high open-circuit voltage of 8 V and a low rectified voltage of 3.3 V. The experimental results have demonstrated that the proposed WSN was successfully driven at an interval time of less than 1 min, and fully self-powered by the scavenged energy from the environmental vibration source of a 0.15-g acceleration and a 40-Hz vibration frequency.
AB - Wireless sensor network (WSN) is an interestingly promising technology with many applications in intelligent environment-monitoring. Its energy consumption is, however, essentially challenged after it is deployed. In this paper, we developed a low-resonant-frequency piezoelectric energy harvesting device as an alternative to power WSN deployed in a weak vibration environment. An energy management module, equipped with a full-bridge rectifier (FBR), a fully self-powered voltage controller, and a logic-level protection circuit was designed to enable a regulated voltage to intermittently drive WSN for temperature monitoring. The power transfer efficiency of FBR reached 42%, presenting a good performance/cost ratio in the case of a relatively high open-circuit voltage of 8 V and a low rectified voltage of 3.3 V. The experimental results have demonstrated that the proposed WSN was successfully driven at an interval time of less than 1 min, and fully self-powered by the scavenged energy from the environmental vibration source of a 0.15-g acceleration and a 40-Hz vibration frequency.
KW - Vibration-based energy harvesting
KW - energy management module
KW - self-powered
KW - wireless sensor network
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85028690686&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/JSEN.2017.2747122
DO - 10.1109/JSEN.2017.2747122
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85028690686
SN - 1530-437X
VL - 17
SP - 6770
EP - 6777
JO - IEEE Sensors Journal
JF - IEEE Sensors Journal
IS - 20
M1 - 8022682
ER -