Investigations of a Stiffness Tunable Nonlinear Vibrational Energy Harvester
Author(s): |
Dongxu Su
Kimihiko Nakano Rencheng Zheng Matthew P. Cartmell |
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Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | International Journal of Structural Stability and Dynamics, November 2014, n. 8, v. 14 |
Page(s): | 1440023 |
DOI: | 10.1142/s0219455414400239 |
Abstract: |
The recent potential benefit of nonlinearity has been applying in order to improve the effectiveness of energy harvesting devices. For instance, at relatively high excitation levels, both low and high-energy responses can coexist for the same parameter combinations in a hardening type Duffing oscillator, and this provides a wider bandwidth and a higher energy harvesting effectiveness under periodic excitations. However, frequency or amplitude sweeps of the excitation must be used in order to reach a desirable high-energy orbit, and this gives a limitation on practical implementation. This paper presents a stiffness tunable nonlinear vibrational energy harvester which contains a moving magnetic end mass attached to a cantilever beam, whose nonlinearity emerges from the interaction forces with two neighboring permanent magnets facing with opposing poles. The motivating hypothesis has been that the jump from the low-energy orbit to the high-energy orbit can be triggered by tuning the stiffness of the system without changing the frequency or the amplitude of the excitation. Theoretical investigations show a methodology for tuning stiffness, and experimental tests have validated that the proposed method can be used to trigger a jump to the desirable state, and hereby this can broaden the bandwidth of the energy harvester. |
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10352703 - Published on:
14/08/2019 - Last updated on:
14/08/2019