'Tuneable' energy harvesters could rival batteries for power
In the near future, we might be able to generate electricity from a variety of motions — everything from walking to natural vibrations in the environment — by using “tuneable” devices for harvesting energy.
While such devices already exist for converting kinetic energy to electrical energy, they’re limited to a narrow range of motions or “frequencies.” In other words, they’re able to generate power only when motion is fairly steady, as with a person walking at a steady pace.
Such devices are called “linear” energy harvesting devices.
There’s greater potential, though, in so-called “non-linear” devices.
“The ideal device would be one that could convert a range of vibrations instead of just a narrow band,” said Samuel Stanton, a graduate student in Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering. Stanton and undergraduate Clark McGehee are working to develop such a device with Brian Mann, assistant professor of mechanical engineering and materials sciences, and have published the results of their latest experiments in the journal Applied Physics Letters.
“Nature doesn’t work in a single frequency, so we wanted to come up with a device that would work over a broad range of frequencies,” Stanton said. “By using magnets to ‘tune’ the bandwidth of the experimental device, we were able verify in the lab that this new non-linear approach can outperform conventional linear devices.”
Although the Duke team’s device looks deceptively simple, it was able to prove the researchers’ theories on a small scale. It is basically a small cantilever, several inches long and a quarter inch wide, with an end magnet that interacts with nearby magnets. The cantilever base itself is made of a piezoelectric material, which has the unique property of releasing electrical voltage when it is strained.
The key to the new approach involved placing moveable magnets of opposing poles on either side of the magnet at the end of the cantilever arm. By changing the distance of the moveable magnets, the researchers were able to “tune” the interactions of the system with its environment, and thus produce electricity over a broader spectrum of frequencies.
“These results suggest to us that this non-linear approach could harvest more of the frequencies from the same ambient vibrations,” Mann said. “More importantly, being able to capture more of the bandwidth makes it more likely that these types of devices could someday rival batteries as a portable power source.”
The range of applications for non-linear energy harvesters varies widely. For example, Mann is working on a project that would use the motion of ocean waves to power an array of sensors that would be carried inside ocean buoys.
“These non-linear systems are self-sustaining, so they are ideal for any electrical device that needs batteries and is in a location that is difficult to access,” Mann said.
For example, the motion of walking could provide enough electricity to power an implanted device, such as a pacemaker or cardiac defibrillator. On a larger scale, sensors in the environment or spacecraft could be powered by the everyday natural vibrations around them, Mann said.