On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation

A flutter-type, nonlinear piezoelectric energy harvester was tested in various combinations of aerodynamic and harmonic base excitation to study its power output and efficiency. The commercial polyvinylidene fluoride film transducer LDT1-028K was used in 33 excitation mode. The aerodynamic excitatio...

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Main Authors: Antiopi-Malvina Stamatellou, Anestis I. Kalfas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Micromachines
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/12/8/962
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spelling doaj-43e40d39b7ba4c818af5537669d2cefb2021-08-26T14:05:09ZengMDPI AGMicromachines2072-666X2021-08-011296296210.3390/mi12080962On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base ExcitationAntiopi-Malvina Stamatellou0Anestis I. Kalfas1Laboratory of Fluid Mechanics and Turbomachinery, Mechanical Engineering Department, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54124 Thessaloniki, GreeceLaboratory of Fluid Mechanics and Turbomachinery, Mechanical Engineering Department, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54124 Thessaloniki, GreeceA flutter-type, nonlinear piezoelectric energy harvester was tested in various combinations of aerodynamic and harmonic base excitation to study its power output and efficiency. The commercial polyvinylidene fluoride film transducer LDT1-028K was used in 33 excitation mode. The aerodynamic excitation was created by a centrifugal fan and the base excitation by a cone speaker. The excitations were produced by varying independently the mean airflow velocity and the frequency of base vibration. A capacitive load was used to store the harvested energy. A line laser was employed along with long exposure photography and high-speed video, for the visualization of the piezo film’s mode shapes and the measurement of maximum tip deflection. The harvested power was mapped along with the maximum tip deflection of the piezo-film, and a process of optimally combining the two excitation sources for maximum power harvesting is demonstrated. The energy conversion efficiency is defined by means of electrical power output divided by the elastic strain energy rate of change during oscillations. The efficiency was mapped and correlated with resonance conditions and results from other studies. It was observed that the conversion efficiency is related to the phase difference between excitation and response and tends to decrease as the excitation frequency rises.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/12/8/962energy harvestingpiezoelectric transducersaeroelasticitybase vibration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antiopi-Malvina Stamatellou
Anestis I. Kalfas
spellingShingle Antiopi-Malvina Stamatellou
Anestis I. Kalfas
On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation
Micromachines
energy harvesting
piezoelectric transducers
aeroelasticity
base vibration
author_facet Antiopi-Malvina Stamatellou
Anestis I. Kalfas
author_sort Antiopi-Malvina Stamatellou
title On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation
title_short On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation
title_full On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation
title_fullStr On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation
title_full_unstemmed On the Efficiency of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvester under Combined Aeroelastic and Base Excitation
title_sort on the efficiency of a piezoelectric energy harvester under combined aeroelastic and base excitation
publisher MDPI AG
series Micromachines
issn 2072-666X
publishDate 2021-08-01
description A flutter-type, nonlinear piezoelectric energy harvester was tested in various combinations of aerodynamic and harmonic base excitation to study its power output and efficiency. The commercial polyvinylidene fluoride film transducer LDT1-028K was used in 33 excitation mode. The aerodynamic excitation was created by a centrifugal fan and the base excitation by a cone speaker. The excitations were produced by varying independently the mean airflow velocity and the frequency of base vibration. A capacitive load was used to store the harvested energy. A line laser was employed along with long exposure photography and high-speed video, for the visualization of the piezo film’s mode shapes and the measurement of maximum tip deflection. The harvested power was mapped along with the maximum tip deflection of the piezo-film, and a process of optimally combining the two excitation sources for maximum power harvesting is demonstrated. The energy conversion efficiency is defined by means of electrical power output divided by the elastic strain energy rate of change during oscillations. The efficiency was mapped and correlated with resonance conditions and results from other studies. It was observed that the conversion efficiency is related to the phase difference between excitation and response and tends to decrease as the excitation frequency rises.
topic energy harvesting
piezoelectric transducers
aeroelasticity
base vibration
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/12/8/962
work_keys_str_mv AT antiopimalvinastamatellou ontheefficiencyofapiezoelectricenergyharvesterundercombinedaeroelasticandbaseexcitation
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