A Multidirectional Forearm Electromagnetic Generator Designed via Numerical Simulations

Abstract

Harvesting biomechanical energy from daily human body motions provides a promising and sustainable power solution for wearable electronics, whose current power supplies, i.e., batteries, have unsatisfactory capacity and durability due to volume, shape, and flexibility constraints. Electromagnetic generators (EMGs) are favorable energy transducers because of their high energy-conversion efficiency, low dependence on frequencies, and long-term stability. However, an EMG that can effectively harvest energy from multi-directional arm motions at aperiodic low frequencies are yet to be created. Here, we introduce a unique EMG configuration by combining a linear and a helix frame into a monolithic unit (EMG-LH), enabling the EMG to scavenge energy from all kinds of arm motions up to 6 degrees of freedom (DOFs) (movement along XYZ axes and forearm rotations). The EMG frame geometry is designed and optimized according to numerical simulations. To clarify the working mechanism and maximize the power output, the copper coils’ winding pattern, the magnets’ velocity profiles, and the resulting voltage output are numerically simulated and then experimentally verified. Our EMG-LH outperforms linear EMGs (EMG-Ls) and helix EMGs (EMG-Hs) in harvesting energy from all arm motions. This work explicitly presents a forearm-wearable energy harvester as a sustainable power source for wearable electronics.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
May 29, 2023
Source ID
10.3390/act12060225

Entities

People

  • Colton King
  • Feng Zhao
  • Nanfei He
  • Qizheng Xie
  • Wei Gao

Organizations

  • North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics
  • North Carolina State University
  • United States Army

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Computer Vision.
  • Electrical Engineering
  • Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy Engineering.

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics
  • Microelectronics - Microelectromechanical Systems