Saturday, January 02, 2010

Researchers develop tiny, autonomous piezoelectric energy harvester

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/01/02/researchers-develop-tiny-autonomous-piezoelectric-energy-harves/

Folks have long been using piezoelectric devices to harvest energy in everything from dance floors to parking lots, but a group of European researchers have now shown off some novel uses for the technology at the recent International Electron Devices Meeting that could see even more of the self-sufficient devices put to use. Their big breakthrough is that they've managed to shrink a piezoelectric device down to "micromachine" size, which was apparently possible in part as a result of using aluminum nitride instead of lead zirconate titanate as the piezoelectric material, thereby making the devices easier to manufacture. Their first such device is a wireless temperature sensor, which is not only extremely tiny, but is able to function autonomously by harvesting energy from vibrations and transmit temperature information to a base station at 15 second intervals. Of course, the researchers say that is just the beginning, and they see similar devices eventually being used in everything from tire-pressure monitoring systems to predictive maintenance of any moving or rotating machine parts.

Researchers develop tiny, autonomous piezoelectric energy harvester originally appeared on Engadget ! on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 07:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Digg  |  sourceElectro IQ  | Email this | Comments