Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
561300 Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing 2013 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

Power harvesting techniques that convert vibration energy into electrical energy through piezoelectric transducers show strong potential for powering smart wireless sensor devices in applications of structural health monitoring. This paper presents an analytical model of the dynamic behavior of an electromechanical piezoelectric bimorph cantilever harvester connected with an AC–DC circuit based on the Euler–Bernoulli beam theory and Hamiltonian theorem. A new cantilevered piezoelectric bimorph structure is proposed in which the plug-type connection between support layer and tip-mass ensures that the gravity center of the tip-mass is collinear with the gravity center of the beam so that the brittle fracture of piezoelectric layers can also be avoided while vibrating with large amplitude. The tip-mass is equated by the inertial force and inertial moment acting at the end of the piezoelectric bimorph beam based on D'Alembert's principle. An AC–DC converting circuit soldered with the piezoelectric elements is also taken into account. A completely new analytic expression of the global behavior of the electromechanical piezoelectric bimorph harvesting system with AC–DC circuit under input base transverse excitation is derived. Moreover, an experimental energy harvester is fabricated and the theoretical analysis and experimental results of the piezoelectric harvester under the input base transverse displacement excitation are validated by using measurements of the absolute tip displacement, electric voltage response, electric current response and electric power harvesting.

► We model piezoelectric bimorph cantilever harvester connected with AC–DC circuit. ► Plug-type structure is proposed and tipmass is equated by inertia force and moment. ► Power is predicted and compared based on theoretical and experimental results. ► Larger displacement does not always result in the higher voltage or lower current. ► Max power is not determined by the maximum of displacement, voltage or current.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Signal Processing
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