Wireless-sensor networks can monitor factory machinery, track
environmental pollution, and measure the movement of buildings and
bridges. But while their uses are seemingly endless, wireless sensors
have a significant limit—power. Although improvements have brought
energy consumption down, batteries still need to be changed. For
networks in remote locales, replacing batteries in thousands of sensors
is a staggering task.
To get around the power constraint,
researchers are working on harnessing electricity from low-power
sources in the environment, such as vibrations from bridges, machinery,
and foot traffic. They've developed microelectromechanical systems, or
MEMS, that tap into those sources, aiming to eventually do away with
batteries entirely.
Now MIT researchers have designed a
MEMS device the size of a U.S. quarter that picks up a wider range of
vibrations than previous designs and generates 100 times the power of
similar devices. The team's results appeared in Applied Physics Letters.
To
harvest vibrational energy, researchers have typically looked to
piezoelectric materials such as quartz, which naturally accumulate
electric charge in response to mechanical stress. They have exploited
these materials at the microscale, engineering MEMS devices that
generate small amounts of power.
A common
energy-harvesting design employs a microchip with a piezoelectric
material known as PZT glued atop a tiny cantilever beam. As the chip
vibrates, the beam moves up and down like a diving board, bending the
PZT. The stressed material builds up an electric charge, which is
picked up by tiny electrodes.
However, the cantilever
approach is limited. The beam itself has a resonant frequency—a
specific frequency at which it wobbles the most. Outside this
frequency, the beam's response drops off, and so does the amount of
power generated.
Sang-Gook Kim, PhD '85, a professor of
mechanical engineering, and Arman Hajati, PhD '11, came up with a
design that increases the device's frequency range, or bandwidth. They
engineered a microchip with a small bridgelike structure that's
anchored to the chip at both ends. Then they deposited a layer of PZT
on the bridge, placing a small weight in the middle.
In
vibration tests the device responded at a wide range of low
frequencies, generating 45 microwatts of power—beating current designs
by two orders of magnitude.
"Our target is at least 100
microwatts, and that's what all the electronics guys are asking us to
get to," says Hajati. "For monitoring a pipeline, if you generate 100
microwatts, you can power a network of smart sensors that can talk
forever with each other."
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