4.6 Article

Performance of a Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting System for an Energy-Autonomous Instrumented Total Hip Replacement: Experimental and Numerical Evaluation

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14185151

Keywords

energy harvesting; piezoelectricity; total hip replacement; orthopaedic implant; testing; finite element analysis

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [SFB 1270-299150580]

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The feasibility of a piezoelectric-based energy harvesting concept for total hip replacements was verified through numerical and experimental studies, providing a basis for design optimizations.
Instrumented implants can improve the clinical outcome of total hip replacements (THRs). To overcome the drawbacks of external energy supply and batteries, energy harvesting is a promising approach to power energy-autonomous implants. Therefore, we recently presented a new piezoelectric-based energy harvesting concept for THRs. In this study, the performance of the proposed energy harvesting system was numerically and experimentally investigated. First, we numerically reproduced our previous results for the physiologically based loading situation in a simplified setup. Thereafter, this configuration was experimentally realised by the implantation of a functional model of the energy harvesting concept into an artificial bone segment. Additionally, the piezoelectric element alone was investigated to analyse the predictive power of the numerical model. We measured the generated voltage for a load profile for walking and calculated the power output. The maximum power for the directly loaded piezoelectric element and the functional model were 28.6 and 10.2 mu W, respectively. Numerically, 72.7 mu W was calculated. The curve progressions were qualitatively in good accordance with the numerical data. The deviations were explained by sensitivity analysis and model simplifications, e.g., material data or lower acting force levels by malalignment and differences between virtual and experimental implantation. The findings verify the feasibility of the proposed energy harvesting concept and form the basis for design optimisations with increased power output.

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