category
PRODUCT INNOVATIONS
MMI/ks
IMEC reports 40 microwatt from micromachined piezoelectric energy harvester
IMEC together with its sister company IMEC-NL at the Holst Centre has fabricated an energy harvester to generate energy from mechanical vibrations by using micromachining technology. The harvester comes together with a model which can be used to optimize the device during design. Output powers up to 40µW were obtained which are in range of the required power for wireless sensor applications.

Energy harvesters, transforming ambient energy into electrical energy, are of great value for situations in which batteries cannot be replaced easily. A typical example is autonomous sensor networks that are spread over large areas or placed in locations that are difficult to access. Vibration harvesters in general make use of electromagnetic, electrostatic or piezoelectric conversion to generate electrical power. IMEC and IMEC-NL developed, modeled and characterized a miniaturized vibration harvester based on a piezoelectric transducer.

For an input vibration with a resonance frequency of 1.8kHz and an amplitude of 180nm, a maximum experimental output power of 40µW was measured. This comes well in range of the amounts of power needed by wireless sensor applications, such as the pulse-oxymeter developed earlier by IMEC and IMEC-NL, operating from the Holst Centre in Eindhoven (The Netherlands).

“After the demonstration of a battery-less pulse-oxymeter, which is fully powered by a thermal scavenger, this is another encouraging result which brings us closer to seeing miniaturized scavengers in real-life applications. We believe that first of such devices will see market introduction in 5 years from now and will become mainstream by the end of next decade;” said Bert Gyselinckx, Program Director IMEC-NL in the Holst Centre.

The device consists of a piezoelectric capacitor formed by a Pt electrode, a PZT layer and a top Al electrode. This capacitor is fabricated on a cantilever that supports a mass on its tip. As the harvester is subjected to oscillations, the mass causes the piezoelectric layer to be stretched. By doing so, it induces an electrical power when an electrical load is connected to the device.

To optimize the proposed device concept, a model was generated to estimate the output power for a given design. The output power of the fabricated devices can be maximized by maximizing the quality factor Q (through a low parasitic dissipation) and the coupling between the electrical and mechanical part (GEMC; generalized electromechanical coupling factor).

IMEC is seeking industrial partners for further joint research on the development and application of energy harvesters for wireless sensor nodes.



More articles in this category:
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
category PRODUCT INNOVATIONS
more articles (8) more articles
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
Thermo Fisher Scientific
New X-ray Spectrometer with first completely integrated EDS/WDS system go
Royston - lab on a chip
Intelligent pump system will advance microfluidic applications go
STMicroelectronics - MEMS gyroscope
Ultra-compact MEMS gyroscope provides analog and digital outputs for design flexibility and system partitioning go
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
category ANALYSIS-MARKET-TRENDS
more articles (7) more articles
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
electronics.ca publications - report
Thin films in energy applications emerging its market, reaching $3.9 Billion in 5 years go
iSuppli - Microelectromechanical Systems
Sensors take the growth baton in the global MEMS market go
micronano-systems
Multiple MEMS potential will provoke market explosion go
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
category NEWS
hide articles hide articles
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry - Nano-Photonics
Terahertz goes Nano go
micronano-systems
Nano charges to rescue lithium go
micronano-systems
Nanowires with large scale ambitions go
University of Southampton (ECS) - Single-electron transistors
New high performance, low power sensor at nanoscale go
MMI/ks
New Brochure: Nanometrology Sensors go
IBM Researchers - world’s tiniest nanophotonic switch
Nanophotonic switch device for routing light on a chip scale go
European Commission
Code of Conduct for Responsible Nanosciences and Nanotechnologies Research go
EU - public-private research partnerships
Europe at the cutting edge of nanotechnology development go
MMI/ks
Berkeley Researchers create first fully functional nanotube radio go
MMI/ks
Georgia Institute of Technology - Taming tiny, unruly waves for nano optics go
MMI/ks
IVAM directory brings together suppliers and users go
MMI/ks
Nano-layer of Ruthenium stabilizes magnetic sensors go
MMI/ks
Placing single nanowires go
MMI/ks
The World-leading Productronica 2007 Trade Show: Electronics Production Industry Full of Optimism Prior to Its Most Important Event go
MMI/ks
Frozen Lightning: NIST’s new nanoelectronic switch go
MMI/ks
Key themes for the future of Nanoelectronics unveiled by ENIAC go
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
category EVENTS
Messe München GmbH
Messe München GmbH
Thurs 19th March 2008, The Royal Society, London
3rd International Conference on Nanotechnology and Smart Textiles for Industry, Healthcare and Fashion go