Zero-crossing detector for a piezoelectric energy harvester

Energy harvesting is a method that extracts electrical energy from the environment. This paper presents an integrated circuit in 0.35-μm CMOS that harvests energy from mechanical vibration using a piezoelectric transducer. The circuit applies a bias-flip rectifier to improve the efficiency of the energy extraction. The paper focuses on the design of the key element of the bias-flip rectifier, the zero-crossing detector. It detects the zero crossing of the input current from the piezoelectric transducer and generates the control signals for the bias-flip rectifier. Post-layout simulations show a very low power consumption and high efficiency of the harvester.

[1]  M.P. Buric,et al.  Piezo-Electric Energy Harvesting for Wireless Sensor Networks , 2006, 2006 IEEE Annual Wireless and Microwave Technology Conference.

[2]  David Blaauw,et al.  A Constant Energy-Per-Cycle Ring Oscillator Over a Wide Frequency Range for Wireless Sensor Nodes , 2016, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits.

[3]  Siyu Yang,et al.  Tiny Piezoelectric Harvesters: Principles, Constraints, and Power Conversion , 2016, IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers.

[4]  Anantha Chandrakasan,et al.  An efficient piezoelectric energy-harvesting interface circuit using a bias-flip rectifier and shared inductor , 2009, 2009 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference - Digest of Technical Papers.