Energy Harvesting Applications using Piezoelectric Sensors

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeet Malhotra ◽  
Shantanu Patil ◽  
Gunchita Kaur Wadhwa ◽  
Dr. Vikas Kumar

Energy harvesting is the technology to extract energy from environment with many surrounding sources of energy. From these sources it is used to extract less electrical power energy and boost up tiny electrical systems or amount of energy stored in a battery. Many methods in energy harvesting among one of the method for harvesting energy is piezoelectric transducers. Energy harvesting depends upon so many factors like conducting circuit, number of sensors, and coupling coefficient of piezoelectric sensors with electromechanical. For large scale applications, one of the best suited technique energy harvesting .


Author(s):  
Muammer Catak ◽  
Fatma Bogammaz ◽  
Sarah AlAjmi ◽  
Sarah AlObaid ◽  
Ilaf AlOmar ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 1532-1543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qingqing Li ◽  
Wanyu Ke ◽  
Tongxin Chang ◽  
Zhijun Hu

A molecular ferroelectrics induced high-content β-phase in PVDF composite films for achieving efficient energy harvesting and battery-free sensors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 4387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge de-J. Lozoya-Santos ◽  
L. C. Félix-Herrán ◽  
Juan C. Tudón-Martínez ◽  
Adriana Vargas-Martinez ◽  
Ricardo A. Ramirez-Mendoza

This work designed and implemented a new low-cost, Internet of Things-oriented, wireless smart sensor prototype to measure mechanical strain. The research effort explores the use of smart materials as transducers, e.g., a magnetorheological elastomer as an electrical-resistance sensor, and a cantilever beam with piezoelectric sensors to harvest energy from vibrations. The study includes subsequent and validated results with a magnetorheological elastomer transducer that contained multiwall carbon nanotubes with iron particles, generated voltage tests from an energy-harvesting system that functions with an array of piezoelectric sensors embedded in a rubber-based cantilever beam, wireless communication to send data from the sensor’s central processing unit towards a website that displays and stores the handled data, and an integrated manufactured prototype. Experiments showed that electrical-resistivity variation versus measured strain, and the voltage-generation capability from vibrations have the potential to be employed in smart sensors that could be integrated into commercial solutions to measure strain in automotive and aircraft systems, and civil structures. The reported experiments included cloud-computing capabilities towards a potential Internet of Things application of the smart sensor in the context of monitoring automotive-chassis vibrations and airfoil damage for further analysis and diagnostics, and in general structural-health-monitoring applications.


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