Piezoelectric energy harvesting from an oscillating wing

Mechatronics and its Applications(2012)

Cited 1|Views3
No score
Abstract
We investigate power levels that can be harvested from aeroelastic vibrations of an elastically-mounted wing that is supported by nonlinear springs. The energy is harvested by attaching a piezoelectric transducer to the plunge degree of freedom. A model that tightly couples the electromechanical model with the three dimensional unsteady vortex lattice method for the prediction of the unsteady aerodynamic loads is developed. The effects of the electrical load resistance, nonlinear torsional spring and eccentricity between the elastic axis and the gravity axis on the level of the harvested power are determined for a range of operating wind speeds. The results show that there is an optimum value of load resistance that maximizes the level of harvested power. The results also show that the nonlinear torsional spring plays an important role in enhancing the level of the harvested power. Furthermore, the harvested power can be increased by properly choosing the eccentricity. This analysis helps in the design of piezoaeroelastic energy harvesters that can operate optimally at prevailing air speeds.
More
Translated text
Key words
elasticity,electric resistance,energy harvesting,piezoelectric transducers,aeroelastic vibrations,air speeds,eccentricity,elastic axis,elastically-mounted wing,electrical load resistance,electromechanical model,gravity axis,load resistance,nonlinear torsional spring,operating wind speeds,oscillating wing,piezoaeroelastic energy harvesters,piezoelectric energy harvesting,piezoelectric transducer,plunge degree of freedom,power levels,three dimensional unsteady vortex lattice method,unsteady aerodynamic loads,three dimensional,aerodynamics,resistance,vibrations,oscillations,wind speed,degree of freedom
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined