BOOK-CHAPTER

Vibration Energy Harvesting: Machinery Vibration, Human Movement and Flow Induced Vibration

Abstract

With the development of low power electronics and energy harvesting technology, selfpowered systems have become a research hotspot over the last decade. The main advantage of self-powered systems is that they require minimum maintenance which makes them to be deployed in large scale or previously inaccessible locations. Therefore, the target of energy harvesting is to power autonomous ‘fit and forget’ electronic systems over their lifetime. Some possible alternative energy sources include photonic energy (Norman, 2007), thermal energy (Huesgen et al., 2008) and mechanical energy (Beeby et al., 2006). Among these sources, photonic energy has already been widely used in power supplies. Solar cells provide excellent power density. However, energy harvesting using light sources restricts the working environment of electronic systems. Such systems cannot work normally in low light or dirty conditions. Thermal energy can be converted to electrical energy by the Seebeck effect while working environment for thermo-powered systems is also limited. Mechanical energy can be found in instances where thermal or photonic energy is not suitable, which makes extracting energy from mechanical energy an attractive approach for powering electronic systems. The source of mechanical energy can be a vibrating structure, a moving human body or air/water flow induced vibration. The frequency of the mechanical excitation depends on the source: less than 10Hz for human movements and typically over 30Hz for machinery vibrations (Roundy et al., 2003). In this chapter, energy harvesting from various vibration sources will be reviewed. In section 2, energy harvesting from machinery vibration will be introduced. A general model of vibration energy harvester is presented first followed by introduction of three main transduction mechanisms, i.e. electromagnetic, piezoelectric and electrostatic transducers. In addition, vibration energy harvesters with frequency tunability and wide bandwidth will be discussed. In section 3, energy harvesting from human movement will be introduced. In section 4, energy harvesting from flow induced vibration (FIV) will be discussed. Three types of such generators will be introduced, i.e. energy harvesting from vortex-induced vibration (VIV), fluttering energy harvesters and Helmholtz resonator. Conclusions will be given in section 5.

Keywords:
Energy harvesting Mechanical energy Vibration Energy flow Thermal energy Electric potential energy Electronics Energy transformation Energy (signal processing) Solar energy Electrical engineering Power (physics) Mechanical engineering Engineering Acoustics Physics

Metrics

54
Cited By
15.73
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
83
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Innovative Energy Harvesting Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Vibration Control and Rheological Fluids
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Civil and Structural Engineering

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