JOURNAL ARTICLE

PIEZOELECTRIC MICRO POWER GENERATOR FOR ENERGY HARVESTING

S.G. KimYoung-Jun JeonJaehwa JeongS.G. Kim

Year: 2004 Journal:   2004 Solid-State, Actuators, and Microsystems Workshop Technical Digest Pages: 148-151

Abstract

A thin film lead zirconate titanate Pb(Zr,Ti)O 3 (PZT), power generating device is developed.It is designed to resonate at specific vibrational frequencies from an ambient, vibrational energy source, thereby creating electrical energy via the piezoelectric effect.The energy harvesting device uses the piezoelectric d 33 mode and is fabricated with three mask steps.Our cantilever device was designed to have a flat structure with a proof mass added to the end.A method for controlling the bowing curvature of the cantilever was applied by modulating the residual stress and elastic properties of the composite beam.The top electrode of Ti and Pt was patterned into an interdigitated shape on top of the sol-gel-spin coated PZT thin film in order to employ the d 33 mode of the piezoelectric.This d 33 mode design can generate at least a 20 times higher voltage than that of the d 31 mode design.The device was mechanically excited by base shaking experiments, which revealed that our device has three resonance modes.The base-shaking experiments at the first resonant frequency (13.9 kHz) demonstrated that the generated charge is proportional to the tip displacement of the cantilever with an approximate linearity coefficient of 4.14 pC/ m.The total system can deliver 1 W of continuous electrical power to a 5.2M resistive load at 2.4V DC.The corresponding energy density is 0.74 mW-h/cm 2 , which compares favorably to current chemical batteries (i.e.lithium ion).We expect the optimized design to generate a much higher power level than we have now by targeting and harvesting from lower frequency vibrations.

Keywords:
Materials science Cantilever Piezoelectricity Energy harvesting Lead zirconate titanate Proof mass Piezoelectric coefficient Resistive touchscreen Optoelectronics Voltage Power density Power (physics) Electrical engineering Ferroelectricity Composite material Microelectromechanical systems

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Citation History

Topics

Innovative Energy Harvesting Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Wireless Power Transfer Systems
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering

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