Concepedia

TLDR

The study analytically and experimentally investigates energy harvesting from submerged ionic polymer metal composites, developing a model that predicts harvested energy as a function of excitation frequency, material and geometric properties, and shunt load. The authors model a base‑excited, fluid‑immersed IPMC strip using Kirchhoff–Love plate theory, linearized Navier–Stokes fluid dynamics, and Poisson–Nernst–Planck chemistry, then apply modal analysis to obtain a closed‑form power expression and optimize the shunt impedance, which is experimentally validated. A closed‑form solution relating the IPMC current to electrode voltage and deformation is presented, confirming the predicted energy harvesting capability in aqueous environments.

Abstract

In this paper, we analytically and experimentally study the energy harvesting capability of submerged ionic polymer metal composites (IPMCs). We consider base excitation of an IPMC strip that is shunted with an electric impedance and immersed in a fluid environment. We develop a modeling framework to predict the energy scavenged from the IPMC vibration as a function of the excitation frequency range, the constitutive and geometric properties of the IPMC, and the electric shunting load. The mechanical vibration of the IPMC strip is modeled through Kirchhoff–Love plate theory. The effect of the encompassing fluid on the IPMC vibration is described by using a linearized solution of the Navier–Stokes equations, that is traditionally considered in modeling atomic force microscope cantilevers. The dynamic chemo-electric response of the IPMC is described through the Poisson–Nernst–Planck model, in which the effect of mechanical deformations of the backbone polymer is accounted for. We present a closed-form solution for the current flowing through the IPMC strip as a function of the voltage across its electrodes and its deformation. We use modal analysis to establish a handleable expression for the power harvested from the vibrating IPMC and to optimize the shunting impedance for maximum energy harvesting. We validate theoretical findings through experiments conducted on IPMC strips vibrating in aqueous environments.

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