| Literature DB >> 31371769 |
Meng Jin1, Bin Liang2, Jing Yang1, Jun Yang3, Jian-Chun Cheng1.
Abstract
Despite the growing attentions dedicated to the harvesting of acoustic energy that is a clean and renewable yet usually wasted energy source, the long wavelength of airborne sound still poses fundamental limits on the miniaturization of harvester devices and hinders practical applications. Here we present an ultrathin and planar acoustic energy harvester with rigidity. We propose a distinctive metasurface-based mechanism that reduces the effective wavelength to produce extraordinarily strong local energy within deep-subwavelength dimension and enable high-efficiently harvesting energy of incident airborne sound with considerably long wavelength. Our design idea is implemented by a foldy-structured metasurface capable of confining low-frequency energy within narrow channel at resonance, with a piezoelectric plate judiciously placed to converse acoustic to electric energy. The resulting device is downscaled to as thin as λ/63 while keeping flat shape and mechanical rigidity. We analytically derive the effective acoustical parameter of the unit cell, and verify the theoretical predictions via numerical simulations which shows the generation of the maximum output power at the prescribed working frequency. Our design with compactness and rigidity makes an important step towards the miniaturization and integration of acoustic energy harvesters and may have far-reaching implication in diverse applications ranging from microelectronic device design to wireless and self-powered active sensing.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31371769 PMCID: PMC6672000 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-47649-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic illustration and mechanism of our design. (a) Schematic illustration of the mechanism for designing ultra-thin planar acoustic energy harvester for absorbing and harvesting airborne sound with wavelength much longer than its physical dimension. Inset: Configuration of an individual unit cell of the designed metasurface, which is composed of a perforated plate and a labyrinthine-like channel. (b) Two-dimensional cross-section view of the metasurface unit cell which clearly illustrates the coiled channel and the substantially elongated effective propagation distance (marked by the red arrow) of the incident acoustic wave after entering the resonator.
Figure 2Results of the absorption coefficient. The black line is result obtained from theoretical analysis and blue circles are from numerical simulation.
Figure 3Result of acoustic pressure. Two dimensional view of the acoustic pressure distribution in the ultrathin acoustic metasurface at 1303 Hz.
Figure 4Sketch of the ultrathin acoustic energy harvester. The design is composed of a labyrinthine resonator and a piezoelectric plate with a PZT layer and a substrate patched under PZT.
Figure 5Output results of ultrathin acoustic energy harvester. (a) Simulated open circuit voltage of the piezoelectric plate as a function of frequency. (b) Simulated output voltage (black solid line) and electric power (red dashed line) of the piezoelectric plate versus the load resistance at 1303 Hz.