Dielectric elastomer generators (DEGs) are electrostatic transducers capable of harvesting electrical energy from oscillating mechanical parts and storing it in a battery or supercapacitor. The energy conversion element typically consists of a flexible capacitor with a variable capacitance that depends on the applied stress cycle and requires an external voltage source (bias voltage). In designing an energy harvesting device from human gait, we propose integrating two components: a dielectric elastomer fabricated using a nanocomposite polyurethane (TPU-CaCu3Ti4O12) and an electret serving as a bias voltage source. In this work, we report on the electret fabrication and long-term charge retention properties using corona charging. The manufactured electrets are tested in coupling with the dielectric elastomer and allowed us to harvest an energy amount of 62 µJ/cycle (3.1 µJ/cm2) on a resistive load of 450 MΩ during motion cycles at a frequency of 0.5 Hz. Given the materials used, this approach is well suited to harvesting energy from human gait and holds promise for powering wearable devices.

Facile Electret Fabrication for Energy Harvesting from Human Gait

Zanoletti, Michele;Vitulo, Paolo;Morina, Riccardo;Callegari, Daniele;Mustarelli, Piercarlo;Patrini, Maddalena
2025-01-01

Abstract

Dielectric elastomer generators (DEGs) are electrostatic transducers capable of harvesting electrical energy from oscillating mechanical parts and storing it in a battery or supercapacitor. The energy conversion element typically consists of a flexible capacitor with a variable capacitance that depends on the applied stress cycle and requires an external voltage source (bias voltage). In designing an energy harvesting device from human gait, we propose integrating two components: a dielectric elastomer fabricated using a nanocomposite polyurethane (TPU-CaCu3Ti4O12) and an electret serving as a bias voltage source. In this work, we report on the electret fabrication and long-term charge retention properties using corona charging. The manufactured electrets are tested in coupling with the dielectric elastomer and allowed us to harvest an energy amount of 62 µJ/cycle (3.1 µJ/cm2) on a resistive load of 450 MΩ during motion cycles at a frequency of 0.5 Hz. Given the materials used, this approach is well suited to harvesting energy from human gait and holds promise for powering wearable devices.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1523897
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