JOURNAL ARTICLE

RF-Powered Wearable Energy Harvesting and Storage Module Based on E-Textile Coplanar Waveguide Rectenna and Supercapacitor

Mahmoud WagihNicholas HillierSheng YongAlex S. WeddellSteve Beeby

Year: 2021 Journal:   IEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation Vol: 2 Pages: 302-314   Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

Abstract

This paper presents a high-efficiency compact ( 0.016λ20 ) textile-integrated energy harvesting and storage module for RF power transfer. A flexible 50 μm -thick coplanar waveguide rectenna filament is integrated with a spray-coated supercapacitor to realize an “e-textile” energy supply module. The meandered antenna maintains an S11<−6 dB inside and outside the fabric and in human proximity with a 2.3 dBi gain. The rectifier achieves a peak RF-DC efficiency of 80%, across a 4.5 kΩ load, and a 1.8 V open-circuit voltage from −7 dBm. The supercapacitor is directly spray-coated on a cotton substrate using carbon and an aqueous electrolyte. When connected to the supercapacitor, the rectifier achieves over an octave half-power bandwidth. The textile-integrated rectenna is demonstrated charging the supercapacitor to 1.5 V (8.4 mJ) in 4 minutes, at 4.2 m from a license-free source, demonstrating a significant improvement over previous rectennas while eliminating power management circuitry. The integrated module has an end-to-end efficiency of 38% at 1.8 m from the transmitter. On-body, the rectenna’s efficiency is 4.8%, inclusive of in-body losses and transient shadowing, harvesting 4 mJ in 32 seconds from 16.6 μW /cm 2 . It is concluded that e-textile rectennas are the most efficient method for powering wearables from μW /cm 2 power densities.

Keywords:
Rectenna Supercapacitor Wearable computer Textile Energy harvesting Coplanar waveguide Energy storage Electrical engineering Materials science Optoelectronics Energy (signal processing) Computer science Electronic engineering Engineering Power (physics) Embedded system Capacitance Telecommunications Physics Electrode Composite material

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FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
49
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0.97
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Citation History

Topics

Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Wireless Power Transfer Systems
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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