Authors
ME Kiziroglou, DE Boyle, SW Wright, EM Yeatman
Publication date
2017/5/1
Journal
Ultrasonics
Volume
77
Pages
54-60
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The use of energy harvesting for powering wireless sensors is made more challenging in most applications by the requirement for customization to each specific application environment because of specificities of the available energy form, such as precise location, direction and motion frequency, as well as the temporal variation and unpredictability of the energy source. Wireless power transfer from dedicated sources can overcome these difficulties, and in this work, the use of targeted ultrasonic power transfer as a possible method for remote powering of sensor nodes is investigated. A powering system for pipeline monitoring sensors is described and studied experimentally, with a pair of identical, non-inertial piezoelectric transducers used at the transmitter and receiver. Power transmission of 18 mW (Root-Mean-Square) through 1 m of a 118 mm diameter cast iron pipe, with 8 mm wall thickness is demonstrated …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ME Kiziroglou, DE Boyle, SW Wright, EM Yeatman - Ultrasonics, 2017