A 30nA Quiescent 80nW to 14mW Power Range Shock-Optimized SECE-based Piezoelectric Harvesting Interface with 420% Harvested Energy Improvement
Anthony Quelen (CEA-LETI), Adrien Morel (CEA-LETI), Pierre Gasnier, (CEA-LETI), Romain Gr\'ezaud (CEA-LETI), St\'ephane Monfray (ST-CROLLES),, Gael Pillonnet (CEA-LETI)

TL;DR
This paper presents a highly energy-efficient, shock-optimized piezoelectric energy harvesting interface based on SECE, achieving significant energy improvement and ultra-low quiescent power suitable for sporadic shock events.
Contribution
It introduces a self-starting, battery-less SECE-based interface with minimal quiescent power, optimized for shock energy harvesting, outperforming previous SSHI-based systems.
Findings
Achieves a 420% increase in harvested energy.
Reduces static current to 30nA for long-term inactivity.
Enables energy extraction from a single 8μJ shock every 100 seconds.
Abstract
Piezoelectric Energy Harvesters (PEH) are usually used to convert mechanical energy (vibration, shocks) into electrical energy, in order to supply energy-autonomous sensor nodes in industrial, biomedical or domotic applications. Non-linear extraction strategies such as Synchronous Electrical Charge Extraction (SECE) [1-2], energy investing [3] or Synchronized Switch Harvesting on Inductor (SSHI) [4] have been developed to maximize the extracted energy from harmonic excitations. However, in most of today's applications, vibrations are not periodic and mechanical shocks occur at unpredictable rates [4]. SSHI interfaces naturally seemed to be the most appropriate candidate for harvesting shocks as they exhibit outstanding performance in periodic excitations [4]. However, the SSHI strategy presents inherent weaknesses while harvesting shocks, since the invested energy stored in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
