| Literature DB >> 30897710 |
Edith Osorio de la Rosa1, Javier Vázquez Castillo2, Mario Carmona Campos3, Gliserio Romeli Barbosa Pool4, Guillermo Becerra Nuñez5, Alejandro Castillo Atoche6, Jaime Ortegón Aguilar7.
Abstract
The emergence of modern technologies, such as Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs), the Internet-of-Things (IoT), and Machine-to-Machine (M2M) communications, involves the use of batteries, which pose a serious environmental risk, with billions of batteries disposed of every year. However, the combination of sensors and wireless communication devices is extremely power-hungry. Energy Harvesting (EH) is fundamental in enabling the use of low-power electronic devices that derive their energy from external sources, such as Microbial Fuel Cells (MFC), solar power, thermal and kinetic energy, among others. Plant Microbial Fuel Cell (PMFC) is a prominent clean energy source and a step towards the development of self-powered systems in indoor and outdoor environments. One of the main challenges with PMFCs is the dynamic power supply, dynamic charging rates and low-energy supply. In this paper, a PMFC-based energy harvester system is proposed for the implementation of autonomous self-powered sensor nodes with IoT and cloud-based service communication protocols. The PMFC design is specifically adapted with the proposed EH circuit for the implementation of IoT-WSN based applications. The PMFC-EH system has a maximum power point at 0.71 V, a current density of 5 mA cm - 2 , and a power density of 3.5 mW cm - 2 with a single plant. Considering a sensor node with a current consumption of 0.35 mA, the PMFC-EH green energy system allows a power autonomy for real-time data processing of IoT-based low-power WSN systems.Entities:
Keywords: energy harvesting; internet of things (IoT); plant microbial fuel cell (PMFC); self-powered systems; wireless sensor network
Year: 2019 PMID: 30897710 PMCID: PMC6470559 DOI: 10.3390/s19061378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1(a) Schematic representation of the proposed PMFC in the set of experiments: PMFC used with mix soil, fertilizer and the Cordyline Fruticosa plant; (b) Typical performance of a PMFC (I-V and P-V characteristic curves).
Figure 2Conceptual PMFC-EH system for the IoT applications proposed in this paper.
Figure 3EH subsystem based on LTC3108 power management circuit.
Figure 4PMFC-EH Sensor Node.
Figure 5Dynamic Power Management Strategy for Ultra-Low Power Consumption.
Figure 6PMFC stainless steel membrane performance comparative: (a) open circuit voltage vs short current density; (b) optimal open voltage vs optimal current density; (c) maximum power density behavior; and (d) internal resistance behavior.
Figure 7PMFC Cu/Zn performance comparative: (a) open circuit voltage; (b) short current density; (c) internal resistance; and (d) maximum power density.
Figure 8PMFC behavior under charge and discharge.
Figure 9Fertilizer PMFC comparative.
Figure 10(a) Polarization curve of PMFC when the controlled potential is maintained for ten cycles; (b) Comparative analysis of the open-circuit voltage (black line) and short-circuit current (blue line) for ten cycles; (c) Power curve of PMFC; and (d) maximum power density (black curve) per cycle and internal resistance parameter (blue curve) per cycle.
Figure 11DPM SSM1 strategy.
Power Consumption results of the PMFC-based EH system for IoT applications.
| DPM SSM2 | DPM SSM1 | |
|---|---|---|
| System | ||
| Time | 2523 s | 1862 s |
| Energy | 3266 mJ | 2375 mJ |
| Power | ||
| Mean | 1.29 mW | 1.27 mW |
| Min | 0.0 mW | 0.00 mW |
| Max | 178.8 mW | 179.74 mW |
| Voltage | ||
| Mean | 3.58 V | 3.58 V |
| Current | ||
| Mean | 0.36 mA | 0.35 mA |
| Min | 0.0 mA | 0.00 mA |
| Max | 49.90 mA | 50.12 mA |
Figure 12IoT Application: web-based supervision system.