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Robust energy harvesting from walking vibrations by means of nonlinear cantilever beams

Author(s)
Kluger, Jocelyn Maxine; Sapsis, Themistoklis P.; Slocum Jr., Alexander H
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Abstract
In the present work we examine how mechanical nonlinearity can be appropriately utilized to achieve strong robustness of performance in an energy harvesting setting. More specifically, for energy harvesting applications, a great challenge is the uncertain character of the excitation. The combination of this uncertainty with the narrow range of good performance for linear oscillators creates the need for more robust designs that adapt to a wider range of excitation signals. A typical application of this kind is energy harvesting from walking vibrations. Depending on the particular characteristics of the person that walks as well as on the pace of walking, the excitation signal obtains completely different forms. In the present work we study a nonlinear spring mechanism that is composed of a cantilever wrapping around a curved surface as it deflects. While for the free cantilever, the force acting on the free tip depends linearly on the tip displacement, the utilization of a contact surface with the appropriate distribution of curvature leads to essentially nonlinear dependence between the tip displacement and the acting force. The studied nonlinear mechanism has favorable mechanical properties such as low frictional losses, minimal moving parts, and a rugged design that can withstand excessive loads. Through numerical simulations we illustrate that by utilizing this essentially nonlinear element in a 2 degrees-of-freedom (DOF) system, we obtain strongly nonlinear energy transfers between the modes of the system. We illustrate that this nonlinear behavior is associated with strong robustness over three radically different excitation signals that correspond to different walking paces. To validate the strong robustness properties of the 2DOF nonlinear system, we perform a direct parameter optimization for 1DOF and 2DOF linear systems as well as for a class of 1DOF and 2DOF systems with nonlinear springs similar to that of the cubic spring that are physically realized by the cantilever–surface mechanism. The optimization results show that the 2DOF nonlinear system presents the best average performance when the excitation signals have three possible forms. Moreover, we observe that while for the linear systems the optimal performance is obtained for small values of the electromagnetic damping, for the 2DOF nonlinear system optimal performance is achieved for large values of damping. This feature is of particular importance for the system׳s robustness to parasitic damping.
Date issued
2015-01
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/108080
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Journal
Journal of Sound and Vibration
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Kluger, Jocelyn M., Themistoklis P. Sapsis, and Alexander H. Slocum. “Robust Energy Harvesting from Walking Vibrations by Means of Nonlinear Cantilever Beams.” Journal of Sound and Vibration 341 (2015): 174–194.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0022-460X
1095-8568

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