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EH300/EH301 EPAD ENERGY HARVESTING Modules

EH300/EH301 EPAD ENERGY HARVESTINGTM Modulesfor low power Linear Devices EH300/EH301 Series EPAD ENERGY HARVESTINGTM (EH) Modules aredesigned for low power intermittent duty and long stor-age time applications. Specific onboard functions include energycapture and accumulation, ENERGY storage, power conditioningand ENERGY management from various ENERGY sources, such assolar cells, PZT piezoelectric ceramic composite elements, in-ductive elements and micro thermal-electric generators. EH300 Series Modules can easily adapt to a variety and wide range ofvoltage and power inputs and outputs. ENERGY can be collectedfrom many types of secondary or waste by-product environmen-tal sources, such as thermal, mechanical, chemical, solar, bio-logical and human body sources.

A Primer on Energy Harvesting and Energy Harvesting Circuits E nergy Harvesting (EH) is the process of capturing and accumulating energy from an energy source as energy

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  Energy, Harvesting, Energy harvesting, Nergy, E nergy harvesting

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Transcription of EH300/EH301 EPAD ENERGY HARVESTING Modules

1 EH300/EH301 EPAD ENERGY HARVESTINGTM Modulesfor low power Linear Devices EH300/EH301 Series EPAD ENERGY HARVESTINGTM (EH) Modules aredesigned for low power intermittent duty and long stor-age time applications. Specific onboard functions include energycapture and accumulation, ENERGY storage, power conditioningand ENERGY management from various ENERGY sources, such assolar cells, PZT piezoelectric ceramic composite elements, in-ductive elements and micro thermal-electric generators. EH300 Series Modules can easily adapt to a variety and wide range ofvoltage and power inputs and outputs. ENERGY can be collectedfrom many types of secondary or waste by-product environmen-tal sources, such as thermal, mechanical, chemical, solar, bio-logical and human body sources.

2 EH300/EH301 Series ModulesEH300/EH301 Series EH Modules can accept ENERGY frommany types of electrical ENERGY sources and store this ENERGY topower conventional and electrical circuits and sys-tems such as wireless sensor networks (WSN) using ZIGBEE standards. EH300/EH301 Series Modules are completely self-powered and always in the active mode. They can function withinstantaneous input voltages ranging from to +/-500V ACor DC, and input currents from 200nA to 400mA. Harvested en-ergy can be collected from sources that produce electrical energyin either a steady or an intermittent and irregular manner withvarying source impedances. EH300/EH301 Series Modules con-dition the stored ENERGY to provide power at output voltage andcurrent levels that are within the limits of a particular electronicsystem power supply specification.

3 For example, to issuch a useful operating voltage range for many types of cir-cuits such as Series Modules are always powered on. Theyare designed to continually and actively operating to capture, ac-cumulate and conserve ENERGY from an external ENERGY individual EH Module is set to operate between two supplyvoltage thresholds, +V_low (VL) DC and +V_high (VH) DC, cor-responding to the minimum and maximum supply output voltagevalues for the intended application. Initially, when an energysource starts to inject ENERGY into the inputs of the Module in theform of electrical charge impulses, these charges are collected,accumulated and stored onto an internal storage capacitor most common ENERGY HARVESTING applications, electrical en-ergy charges arrive as electrical ENERGY charge packets in the formof input voltage spikes in an uncontrolled and unpredictable man-ner.

4 Often these electrical charge packets also arrive in a widerange of voltages, currents and timing waveforms. EH300/EH301 Series Modules are designed to accommodate such conditionswith exceptional efficiency and , Complete ENERGY HARVESTING functions Random AC or DC inputs accepted Broad range of irregular input voltage, current andwaveforms Compatible ENERGY HARVESTING sources:- PZT, piezo electric fiber composite- solar photo voltaic cells- thermoelectric generators Compatible with most wireless sensor networks (WSN) Self-contained onboard ENERGY storage Self-powered and always active High ENERGY efficiency High ENERGY retention rate Long operating life No calibration or setup required Maintenance free operation Simple to use and operate Optional external ENERGY storage Optional logic input/output control Virtually unlimited operating cycles CMOS logic compatible Flexible output current range ( A to 1A)

5 Size AA battery footprint Moisture and dust protection Applications Extreme life-span power source EH ENERGY capture, storage and power managementfrom: mechanical, thermal, chemical, solar, biologicaland human body sources Wireless sensor network remote node power supply EH based battery substitution and/or remote batterycharging systems Hybrid or alternative power source conditioning Condition based monitoring systems Self-powered remote control switching systems Hybrid power (dual power) systems with extendedoperating life System power reliability enhancement Most intermittent duty cycle remote-site applicationsEH300 (actual size)A Primer on ENERGY HARVESTING andEnergy HARVESTING CircuitsEnergy HARVESTING (EH) is the process of capturing andaccumulating ENERGY from an ENERGY source as energyfrom it becomes available.

6 Storing that ENERGY for a pe-riod of time, and conditioning it into a form that can be usedlater, for instance to operate a microprocessor within its oper-ating limits. In many common cases, EH is associated withcapturing residual ENERGY as a by-product of a natural environ-mental phenomenon or as a by-product of industrial these residual ENERGY were not previously captured, butinstead were released into the environment as waste. Commontarget ENERGY HARVESTING sources for EH are mechanical en-ergy resulting from vibration, stress and strain; thermal energyfrom furnaces and other heating sources, even biological; so-lar ENERGY from all forms of light sources, ranging from light-ing, light emissions and the sun; electromagnetic ENERGY thatare captured via inductors, coils and transformers; wind andfluid ENERGY resulting from air and liquid flow; and chemicalenergy from naturally recurring or biological most cases, these sources provide ENERGY in very smallpackets that have been difficult to capture for use.

7 New oppor-tunities in ENERGY HARVESTING are being enabled by new EHcircuits that can finally provide the overall ENERGY Manage-ment to capture and store these small ENERGY packets and con-dition them to provide a useful ENERGY Management provided by these EH circuitsneed to include high ENERGY Efficiency to capture and accu-mulate these small ENERGY packets; high ENERGY Retention tostore the ENERGY for long periods of time; and the proper En-ergy Conditioning to perform the desired task. The EnergyManagement must be well defined even starting at op-eration and tolerate a wide range of voltage, current, and wave-form inputs, including over-voltage, over-charge, and other ir-regular input EfficiencyThe ENERGY Management of capturing, accumulating andstoring small packets of electrical ENERGY , requires High En-ergy Efficiency.

8 The net captured ENERGY is a direct function ofenergy available for capture minus the ENERGY the EH circuitmust consume to stay in the active mode. The circuit must stayin the active mode and be ready to perform the ENERGY capturewhenever harvestable ENERGY becomes available and be readyto provide an output as the application design requires example, let's say the ENERGY is vibration from some-one walking on a surface embedded with a vibration energysource with an EH circuit and a temperature sensor and wire-less transmitter. The small ENERGY packets provided from the 2007 Advanced Linear Devices, Inc. 415 Tasman Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94089 Tel: (408) 747-1155 Fax: (408)747-1286 infrequent pedestrian must power the EH circuit in theactive mode for a long period of time until the EH circuit triggersthe transmitter to send the temperature data.

9 The ENERGY Effi-ciency must be very high so that the ENERGY consumed by the EHcircuit is much smaller than the small ENERGY provided by thevibrations. ENERGY RetentionA second key component of ENERGY Management is HighEnergy Retention to store the captured ENERGY for as long aspossible with minimal leakage or loss. In the example of thepedestrian, if pedestrian activity is low, it may be many hoursbefore enough ENERGY has been stored by the EH circuit to trig-ger the data transmission or many hours before the applicationdesign wants the data transmitted. Therefore, the EH circuitmust have extremely high ENERGY Retention. ENERGY ManagementEnergy Conditioning is a third key component of EnergyManagement.

10 The EH circuit must Condition the stored energyto provide the output necessary for the desired application, suchas operating a self-contained wireless sensor network node. Inthe prior example, the EH circuit conditions collected small pack-ets of ENERGY to provide the required voltage-output and current-output conditions to operate the temperature sensor and the wire-less ZIGBEE transmitter. Advanced Linear Devices, Inc. (ALD) is a design innovationleader in analog semiconductors specializing in developmentand manufacture of precision CMOS linear integrated cir-cuits, including analog switches, A/D converters and chipsets,analog timers, comparators, operational amplifiers and EPAD comparators and operational amplifiers, conventional andEPAD MOSFET transistors, Digital Voltmeter and EnergyHarvesting board level products.


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