| Literature DB >> 25734649 |
Chuang Zhang1, Xue-Feng He2,3, Si-Yu Li4, Yao-Qing Cheng5, Yang Rao6.
Abstract
A wireless temperature sensor node composed of a piezoelectric wind energy harvester, a temperature sensor, a microcontroller, a power management circuit and a wireless transmitting module was developed. The wind-induced vibration energy harvester with a cuboid chamber of 62 mm × 19.6 mm × 10 mm converts ambient wind energy into electrical energy to power the sensor node. A TMP102 temperature sensor and the MSP430 microcontroller are used to measure the temperature. The power management module consists of LTC3588-1 and LT3009 units. The measured temperature is transmitted by the nRF24l01 transceiver. Experimental results show that the critical wind speed of the harvester was about 5.4 m/s and the output power of the harvester was about 1.59 mW for the electrical load of 20 kΩ at wind speed of 11.2 m/s, which was sufficient to power the wireless sensor node to measure and transmit the temperature every 13 s. When the wind speed increased from 6 m/s to 11.5 m/s, the self-powered wireless sensor node worked normally.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25734649 PMCID: PMC4435174 DOI: 10.3390/s150305020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1A prototype of the wind energy harvester with a resonant cavity.
Figure 2Experimental setup.
Figure 3Open circuit voltage versus wind speed.
Figure 4Output power versus resistance with wind speed of 11.2 m/s.
Figure 5Output power on a 20 kΩ resistor versus wind speed.
Figure 6Time history of voltage on a 20 kΩ resistor with wind speed of 11.2 m/s.
Summary of several piezoelectric wind energy harvesters.
| Reference | Size | Wind Speed (m/s) | Maximum Power (µW) | Power Density (µW/cm3) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tan [ | Cantilever: 76.7 mm × 12.7 mm × 2.2 mm | 6.7 | 155 | 72.3 |
| Bryant [ | Cantilever: 254 mm × 25.4 mm × 0.381 mm with two PZT unimorph of 46 mm × 20.6 mm × 0.254 mm Fin: 29.7 × 136 mm | 7.9 | 2200 | 748 a |
| Li [ | Cantilever: 41 mm × 16 mm × 0.205 mm | 8 | 260 | 1933 |
| Sirohi [ | Cantilever: 161 mm × 38 mm × 0.636 mm (2 pieces) Fin: length 251 mm, triangular section with side length of 40 mm Total: 160 mm × 250 mm | 5.2 | 53,000 | 6811 a |
| Yang [ | Cantilever: 150 mm × 30 mm × 0.6 mm with two piezoelectric sheet of 61 mm × 35 mm × 0.5 mm Fin: 150 mm × 40 mm × 40mm | 8 | 8400 | 1737 a |
| Liu [ | Cantilever: 3.3 mm × 2 mm × 0.4 mm (MEMS) | 15.6 | 0.0387 | 14.7 |
| He [ | Cantilever: 10 mm × 8 mm × 0.51 mm (MEMS) | 16.3 | 2.27 | 55.6 |
| Weinstein [ | Cantilever: 28.6 mm × 6.3 mm × 0.381 mm Fin: not given Blunt body: diameter 25 mm Total: 225 mm × 110 mm | 5 | 3000 | 43,701 a |
| Clair [ | Cantilever: aluminum sheet of 58 mm × 16 mm × 0.3 mm with a PZT unimorph of 12 mm × 13 mm × 0.127mm Cavity: diameter of 76.2 mm, volume of 24,000 mm3 | 12.5 | 800 | 2683 a (33.3 b) |
| Ji [ | Cantilever: 200 mm × 15 mm × 0.8 mm with an attached piezoelectric sheet of 20 mm × 15 mm × 0.2 mm Cavity: inlet of 30 mm × 20 mm, the length is not given, which should be a little longer than 200 mm. | 9.8 | 4500 | 1829 a (~37.5 b) |
| This work | Cantilever: a PZT bimorph of 38 mm × 6.4 mm × 0.38 mm and a FET sheet of 20 mm × 6.4 mm × 0.25 mm Cavity: 62 mm × 19.6 mm × 10 mm | 11.2 | 1590 | 12,780 a (130.8 b) |
a Calculated according to the volume of the cantilever; b Calculated according to the volume of the cavity.
Figure 7Block diagram of the self-powered wireless sensor node.
Figure 8The power management circuit.
Figure 9Flow chat of the measurement process.
Figure 10The photo of the self-powered wireless temperature sensor node.
Figure 11The duty time of the self-powered wireless sensor.
Typical parameters of the wireless sensing module.
| Module | Current (µA) | Voltage (V) | Power (µW) | Time (ms) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RF transmission | 11,300 | 3.3 | 37,290 | 10.98 |
| Measurement activity | 420 | 3.3 | 1386 | 53.34 |
| LPM3 | 1.6 | 3.3 | 5.28 | 2000 |
| Temperature sensor | 10 | 3.3 | 33 | 10.74 |