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Underwater thrust and power generation using flexible piezoelectric composites: an experimental investigation toward self-powered swimmer-sensor platforms

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated underwater thrust and electricity generation using biomimetic structures with macro-fiber composite piezoelectrics and compared the favorable effect of having a passive caudal fin on the frequency bandwidth.
Abstract
Fiber-based flexible piezoelectric composites offer several advantages to use in energy harvesting and biomimetic locomotion These advantages include ease of application, high power density, effective bending actuation, silent operation over a range of frequencies, and light weight Piezoelectric materials exhibit the well-known direct and converse piezoelectric effects The direct piezoelectric effect has received growing attention for low-power generation to use in wireless electronic applications while the converse piezoelectric effect constitutes an alternative to replace the conventional actuators used in biomimetic locomotion In this paper, underwater thrust and electricity generation are investigated experimentally by focusing on biomimetic structures with macro-fiber composite piezoelectrics Fish-like bimorph configurations with and without a passive caudal fin (tail) are fabricated and compared The favorable effect of having a passive caudal fin on the frequency bandwidth is reported The presence of a passive caudal fin is observed to bring the second bending mode close to the first one, yielding a wideband behavior in thrust generation The same smart fish configuration is tested for underwater piezoelectric power generation in response to harmonic excitation from its head Resonant piezohydroelastic actuation is reported to generate milli-newton level hydrodynamic thrust using milli-watt level actuation power input The average actuation power requirement for generating a mean thrust of 19 mN at 6 Hz using a 10 g piezoelastic fish with a caudal fin is measured as 120 mW This work also discusses the feasibility of thrust generation using the harvested energy toward enabling self-powered swimmer-sensor platforms with comparisons based on the capacity levels of structural thin-film battery layers as well as harvested solar and vibrational energy (Some figures may appear in colour only in the online journal)

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive review on the state-of-the-art of piezoelectric energy harvesting

TL;DR: A comprehensive review on the state-of-the-art of piezoelectric energy harvesting is presented in this paper, where the authors present the broad spectrum of applications of piezolectric materials for clean power supply to wireless electronics in diverse fields.
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A Review on Mechanisms for Piezoelectric-Based Energy Harvesters

TL;DR: In this paper, Fluid Structure Interaction based, human-based, and vibration-based energy harvesting mechanisms were studied. And qualitative and quantitative analysis of existing PEH mechanisms has been carried out.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bio-inspired aquatic robotics by untethered piezohydroelastic actuation

TL;DR: This paper investigates fish-like aquatic robotics using flexible bimorphs made of macro-fiber composite (MFC) piezoelectric laminates for carangiform locomotion as well as the development of a robotic fish prototype combining a microcontroller and a printed-circuit-board amplifier to generate high actuation voltage for untethered locomotion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flexible piezoelectric energy harvesting from jaw movements

TL;DR: In this paper, a proof-of-concept for a head-mounted device with a PFC chin strap capable of harvesting energy from jaw movements is presented. But despite their excellent potential for energy harvesting, very few PFC mechanisms have been developed to capture the human body power and convert it into an electric current to power wearable electronic devices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid piezoelectric-inductive flow energy harvesting and dimensionless electroaeroelastic analysis for scaling

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented the concept of hybrid piezoelectric-inductive power generation with electroaeroelastic modeling and simulations and analyzed the dependence of the cut-in speed (flutter speed) and the maximum power output of the harvester on the system parameters.
References
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Use of piezoelectric actuators as elements of intelligent structures

TL;DR: In this paper, a scaling analysis is performed to demonstrate that the effectiveness of actuators is independent of the size of the structure and evaluate various piezoelectric materials based on their effectiveness in transmitting strain to the substructure.
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A review of power harvesting using piezoelectric materials (2003–2006)

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Review of fish swimming modes for aquatic locomotion

TL;DR: In this article, an overview of the swimming mechanisms employed by fish is presented, with a relevant and useful introduction to the existing literature for engineers with an interest in the emerging area of aquatic biomechanisms.
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Piezoelectric Energy Harvesting

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a mathematical model of a piezoelectric energy harvesting system with a two-segment cantilever and a single-mode Euler-Bernoulli model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of a micro-electric generator for microsystems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a microgenerator that generates electricity from mechanical energy when embedded in a vibrating medium, and the power produced is proportional to the cube of the frequency of vibration, and that the mass deflection should be as large as possible.
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