scholarly journals Energy harvesting efficiency of piezoelectric flags in axial flows

2013 ◽  
Vol 714 ◽  
pp. 489-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sébastien Michelin ◽  
Olivier Doaré

AbstractSelf-sustained oscillations resulting from fluid–solid instabilities, such as the flutter of a flexible flag in axial flow, can be used to harvest energy if one is able to convert the solid energy into electricity. Here, this is achieved using piezoelectric patches attached to the surface of the flag, which convert the solid deformation into an electric current powering purely resistive output circuits. Nonlinear numerical simulations in the slender-body limit, based on an explicit description of the coupling between the fluid–solid and electric systems, are used to determine the harvesting efficiency of the system, namely the fraction of the flow kinetic energy flux effectively used to power the output circuit, and its evolution with the system’s parameters. The role of the tuning between the characteristic frequencies of the fluid–solid and electric systems is emphasized, as well as the critical impact of the piezoelectric coupling intensity. High fluid loading, classically associated with destabilization by damping, leads to greater energy harvesting, but with a weaker robustness to flow velocity fluctuations due to the sensitivity of the flapping mode selection. This suggests that a control of this mode selection by a careful design of the output circuit could provide some opportunities to improve the efficiency and robustness of the energy harvesting process.

Author(s):  
Olivier Doaré ◽  
Sébastien Michelin ◽  
Miguel Pineirua ◽  
Yifan Xia

In this article, energy harvesting with a fluttering cantilevered plate covered by piezoelectric patches in an axial flow is adressed. A theoretical model is presented which is then discretized and numerically integrated to perform a parametric study of the energy harvesting efficiency of the system. When one, two or three piezoelectric patches cover the plate, the optimal distributions of the patches that maximize the efficiency are obtained. Experimental results are presented, which are in good agreement with the model. When a significantly high number of patches of small size are considered, a continuous model is used to study the influence of a resonant harvesting circuit. A lock-in phenomenon is evidenced, which is able to significantly increase the efficiency.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernardo Luiz R. Ribeiro ◽  
Yunxing Su ◽  
Quentin Guillaumin ◽  
Kenneth S. Breuer ◽  
Jennifer A. Franck

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Da Costa Ferreira ◽  
Fábio Roberto Chavarette ◽  
Jean-Marc Stephane Lafay ◽  
Paulo Rogerio Novak ◽  
Samuel Pagotto ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Philipps ◽  
G. Peharz ◽  
R. Hoheisel ◽  
T. Hornung ◽  
N. M. Al-Abbadi ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 172988141875587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Wang ◽  
Wei Song ◽  
Shiqiang Zhu

Energy consumption has significant influence on the working time of soft robots in mobile applications. Fluidic soft actuators usually release pressurized fluid to environment in retraction motion, resulting in dissipation of considerable energy, especially when the actuators are operated frequently. This article mainly explores the potential and approaches of harvesting the energy released from the actuators. First, the strain energy and pressurized energy stored in fluidic soft actuators are modeled based on elastic mechanics. Then, taking soft fiber-reinforced bending actuators as case study, the stored energy is calculated and its parametric characteristics are presented. Finally, two energy harvesting schematics as well as dynamic models are proposed and evaluated using numerical analysis. The results show that the control performance of the energy harvesting system becomes worse because of increased damping effect and its energy harvesting efficiency is only 14.2% due to the losses of energy conversion. The energy harvesting system in pneumatic form is a little more complex. However, its control performance is close to the original system and its energy harvesting efficiency reaches about 44.1%.


2022 ◽  
Vol 891 ◽  
pp. 162040
Author(s):  
Ikhtiar Ahmad ◽  
Rashida Jafer ◽  
Syed Mustansar Abbas ◽  
Nisar Ahmad ◽  
Ata-ur-Rehman ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ziheng Zhu ◽  
Lin Xu ◽  
Mohamed A. A. Abdelkareem ◽  
Junyi Zou ◽  
Jia Mi

Abstract With the recent energy crisis, the new energy harvesting technologies have become one of the hot spots in engineering academic research and industrial applications. By its wide range of application fields, vibration energy harvesting technologies have been gradually developed and utilized in which an efficient and stable harvester technology is one of the recent key problems. In order to improve energy harvesting efficiency and reduce energy loss caused by motor inertial commutation, many mechanical structures or hydraulic structures that convert reciprocating vibration energy into single direction rotation of motor are proposed. Although these methods can improve energy harvesting efficiency, they can have negative effects in some cases, especially in the case of vibration energy harvesting from human beings. This paper proposes a vibration harvesting mechanism with mechanical rectification filter function applied to backpack. The prototype model of the system was established in SolidWorks and imported into ADAMS. Thereafter, dynamic analyses of mechanical rectification filtering characteristics and meshing characteristics of one-way clutch were simulated in ADAMS. Based on ADAMS, parametric design analysis and its influence on the mechanical rectification characteristics were investigated. The simulation results were validated by bench test results. Simulation results is done by ADAMS and the results match well with bench test results.


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