TECHNICAL PAPERS
Dec 1, 2008

Energy-Harvesting System-in-Package Microsystem1

Publication: Journal of Energy Engineering
Volume 134, Issue 4

Abstract

As microscale devices, such as wireless microsensors and noninvasive biomedical implants, continue to shrink and incorporate more functions, energy becomes scarce, thereby shortening operation life. Furthermore, the limited volume space available constrains the stored energy available in state-of-the-art microbattery technologies, such as thin-film lithium ion (Li Ion). For long-lasting life, it is, therefore, necessary to replenish continuously the energy consumed by harnessing, storing, and delivering energy from the environment in situ, i.e., in the package, alongside the application electronics. Operation life would ultimately be independent from storage limitations. The proposed self-contained, system-in-package solution is composed of three different energy-harvesting sources (light, vibrations, and thermal gradients) that sustain the system, while a charger stores the harnessed energy into an in-package Li Ion. Since substantially low-power levels are expected, the sensor must minimize energy consumption and the system, therefore, must be power moded into various operational modes to consume power only when necessary. Experimental measurements show how an electrostatic harvester sources nanoscale currents that can supply 1.18μW from typical vibrations and, thus, recover the system consumption within 37.3s .

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Published In

Go to Journal of Energy Engineering
Journal of Energy Engineering
Volume 134Issue 4December 2008
Pages: 121 - 129

History

Received: Jan 30, 2007
Accepted: Mar 10, 2008
Published online: Dec 1, 2008
Published in print: Dec 2008

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Notes

Based on “Long-Lasting, Self-Sustaining, and Energy-Harvesting System-in-Package (SiP) Wireless Micro-Sensor Solution,” presented at the 2005 International Conference on Energy, Environment, and Disasters (INCEED) at Charlotte, NC, USA.

Authors

Affiliations

Erick O. Torres [email protected]
Graduate Research Assistant and Ph.D. Student, Georgia Tech Analog, Power, and Energy IC Design Laboratory, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 777 Atlantic Dr., Atlanta, GA 30332-0250. E-mail: [email protected]
Gabriel A. Rincón-Mora [email protected]
Associate Professor, Georgia Tech Analog, Power, and Energy IC Design Laboratory, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 777 Atlantic Dr., Atlanta, GA 30332-0250. E-mail: [email protected]

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