4.6 Article

A Reconfigurable Capacitive Power Converter With Capacitance Redistribution for Indoor Light-Powered Batteryless Internet-of-Things Devices

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF SOLID-STATE CIRCUITS
Volume 56, Issue 10, Pages 2934-2942

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSSC.2021.3075217

Keywords

Capacitance redistribution; energy harvesting; Internet of Things (IoT); reconfigurable charge pump

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [110-2636-E-009-024]
  2. NOVATEK Fellowship
  3. Center for Neuromodulation Medical Electronics Systems from Featured Areas Research Center Program within Ministry of Education in Taiwan

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This article introduces a reconfigurable capacitive power converter for indoor light-powered batteryless IoT devices, which efficiently redistributes capacitance, stores and reuses harvested energy, and achieves high peak-power conversion efficiency.
In this article, a reconfigurable capacitive power converter with capacitance redistribution for indoor light-powered batteryless Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices is presented. The proposed converter is capable of redistributing the capacitance among two charge pump stages to efficiently utilize the harvested energy and further powering milliwatt-powered loading circuits occasionally. Moreover, the proposed converter is capable of storing and reusing the harvested energy to cope with the power demand under different operating modes. The first charge pump stage stores the excessive energy produced by a photovoltaic (PV) cell to the storage capacitor using a maximum power point tracking (MPPT) technique under low-output power demand, whereas the second stage provides a regulated 1.5-V output voltage. The variation of the PV input voltage (from 0.45 to 0.9 V) is compensated by employing a converter, whose power stage consists of 16 reconfigurable charge pump submodules with 1.5x and 2 x conversion ratios and a digital low-dropout (DLDO) regulator. By implementing the proposed capacitance redistribution, the on-chip capacitance can be reduced by 46.7%. The proposed capacitive power converter is fabricated using a 0.18-mu m CMOS process. The measured results show a peak-power conversion efficiency of 92.4%, 65.7%, and 69.5% for 1x , 1.5x , and 2x conversion ratios, respectively.

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