4.6 Article

Design Scalability Study of the Γ-Shaped Piezoelectric Harvester Based on Generalized Classical Ritz Method and Optimization

Journal

ELECTRONICS
Volume 10, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/electronics10161887

Keywords

piezoelectric energy harvester; generalized classical Ritz method; shape optimization; differential evolution; normalized power density; design scalability

Funding

  1. MOTIE (Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Energy) in Korea, under the Fostering Global Talents for Innovative Growth Program [P0008748]
  2. Global Human Resource Development for Innovative Design in Robot and Engineering
  3. Ministry of Health & Welfare (MOHW), Republic of Korea [P0008748] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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This study investigates the design scalability of a Gamma-shaped piezoelectric energy harvester using the generalized classical Ritz method and a differential evolution algorithm. The accuracy of numerical simulation is experimentally validated, and a power maximization design study is conducted to determine the optimal design parameters. The optimized Gamma EH achieves the highest normalized power density among reviewed PE harvesters, indicating its superior performance in power output.
This paper studies the design scalability of a Gamma-shaped piezoelectric energy harvester (Gamma EH) using the generalized classical Ritz method (GCRM) and differential evolution algorithm. The generalized classical Ritz method (GCRM) is the advanced version of the classical Ritz method (CRM) that can handle a multibody system by assembling its equations of motion interconnected by the constraint equations. In this study, the GCRM is extended for analysis of the piezoelectric energy harvesters with material and/or orientation discontinuity between members. The electromechanical equations of motion are derived for the PE harvester using GCRM, and the accuracy of the numerical simulation is experimentally validated by comparing frequency response functions for voltage and power output. Then the GCRM is used in the power maximization design study that considers four different total masses-15 g, 30 g, 45 g, 60 g-to understand design scalability. The optimized Gamma EH has the maximum normalized power density of 23.1 x 10(3) kg.s.m(-3) which is the highest among the reviewed PE harvesters. We discuss how the design parameters need to be determined at different harvester scales.

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