Technical Papers
Jun 5, 2018

Experimental Validation of Piezoelectric Energy-Harvesting Device for Built Infrastructure Applications

Publication: Journal of Bridge Engineering
Volume 23, Issue 8

Abstract

Vibration energy-harvesting devices are increasingly becoming more efficient and useful. The performance of such devices for energy harvesting from vibrations of civil infrastructure can be theoretically quantified, and energy harvesting under harmonic loadings can be validated experimentally. Experimental validation of such devices for civil infrastructure applications, such as bridges, remains an important but more complex and challenging issue, in part due to the more uncertain nature of the dynamic response of structures under operational conditions and problems with access for such testing. Lack of existing experimental benchmarks is also a major obstacle behind adopting this technology for bridges. This study presents a laboratory-based experimental procedure through which a piezoelectric energy harvester was experimentally verified for rail bridges in their operational condition with trains traversing them. A general experimental arrangement required for validating a piezoelectric cantilever energy-harvesting device is presented, along with the fabrication of a prototype device and detailed experimental setup. A model bridge undergoing loadings from an international train fleet was chosen, and the acceleration response from the bridge was used as the excitation source for the energy-harvesting device. Numerically estimated performances of the energy harvester were validated by experimentation for a range of trains. The method is applicable for validating energy harvesting from arbitrary vibrations of built infrastructure within the laboratory environment without the need of scaling. The device and related experimental procedure will serve as a benchmark for similar unscaled tests within a laboratory environment and can be useful for assessing devices or their applications in monitoring built infrastructure under realistic conditions without the need for deployment on site.

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Go to Journal of Bridge Engineering
Journal of Bridge Engineering
Volume 23Issue 8August 2018

History

Received: Aug 17, 2017
Accepted: Feb 6, 2018
Published online: Jun 5, 2018
Published in print: Aug 1, 2018
Discussion open until: Nov 5, 2018

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Authors

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Paul Cahill [email protected]
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Marine and Renewable Energy Ireland (MaREI), Environmental Research Institute (ERI) University College Cork, Cork P43 C573, Ireland (corresponding author). Email: [email protected]
Alan Mathewson
Head of Group, Heterogeneous Systems Integration Group, Micro and Nano Systems Centre, Tyndall National Institute, Cork, T12 R5CP, Ireland.
Vikram Pakrashi
Assistant Professor, Dynamical Systems and Risk Laboratory School of Mechanical and Material Engineering and Centre for Marine and Renewable Energy Ireland (MaREI), Univ. College Dublin, Dublin D04 E4XO, Ireland.

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