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A broadband vibro-impacting power harvester with symmetrical piezoelectric bimorph-stops
37
Citations
8
References
2011
Year
EngineeringVibration MeasurementSymmetrical Piezoelectric Bimorph-stopsVibration AnalysisVibrationsPiezoelectric MaterialSmart StructureStructural VibrationElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingMechanical DesignStructural Health MonitoringActive Vibration ControlPiezoelectricityAircraft Power SystemBiomedical SensorsSensorsAerospace EngineeringAircraft StructurePiezoelectric NanogeneratorsMechanical SystemsFrequency AgileVibration Control
The certification of retrofitted structural health monitoring (SHM) systems for use on aircraft raises a number of challenges. One critical issue is determining the optimal means of supplying power to these systems, given that access to the existing aircraft power system is often problematic. Previously, the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation has shown that a structural strain-based energy harvesting approach can be used to power a device for SHM of aircraft structure. Acceleration-based power harvesting from airframes can be more demanding than a strain-based approach because the vibration spectrum of an aircraft structure can vary dynamically with flight conditions. A vibration spectrum with varying frequency may severely limit the energy harvested by a single-degree-of-freedom resonance-based device, and hence a frequency agile or (relatively) broadband device is often required to maximize the energy harvested. This paper reports on an investigation into the use of a vibro-impact approach to construct a piezoelectric-based kinetic power harvester that can operate in the approximate frequency range of 29–63 Hz.
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