A micro electromagnetic generator for vibration energy harvesting

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Abstract

Vibration energy harvesting is receiving a considerable amount of interest as a means for powering wireless sensor nodes. This paper presents a small (component volume 0.1 cm3, practical volume 0.15 cm3) electromagnetic generator utilizing discrete components and optimized for a low ambient vibration level based upon real application data. The generator uses four magnets arranged on an etched cantilever with a wound coil located within the moving magnetic field. Magnet size and coil properties were optimized, with the final device producing 46 νW in a resistive load of 4 kΩ from just 0.59 m s-2 acceleration levels at its resonant frequency of 52 Hz. A voltage of 428 mVrms was obtained from the generator with a 2300 turn coil which has proved sufficient for subsequent rectification and voltage step-up circuitry. The generator delivers 30% of the power supplied from the environment to useful electrical power in the load. This generator compares very favourably with other demonstrated examples in the literature, both in terms of normalized power density and efficiency. © 2007 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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APA

Beeby, S. P., Torah, R. N., Tudor, M. J., Glynne-Jones, P., O’Donnell, T., Saha, C. R., & Roy, S. (2007). A micro electromagnetic generator for vibration energy harvesting. Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, 17(7), 1257–1265. https://doi.org/10.1088/0960-1317/17/7/007

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