A Bicycle-Embedded Electromagnetic Harvester for Providing Energy to Low-Power Electronic Devices

Author:

Urbina Robert1ORCID,Baron Luis1ORCID,Carvajal Juan-Pablo1ORCID,Pérez Manuel1ORCID,Paez-Rueda Carlos-Ivan1ORCID,Fajardo Arturo1ORCID,Yamhure Germán1ORCID,Perilla Gabriel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electronic Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogota 110311, Colombia

Abstract

Bicycles are rapidly gaining popularity as a sustainable mode of transportation around the world. Furthermore, the smart bicycle paradigm enables increased use through the Internet of Things applications (e.g., GPS tracking systems). This new paradigm introduces energy autonomy as a new challenge. The energy harvesting technology can capture the energy present in the cycling environment (e.g., kinetic or solar) to give this autonomy. The kinetic energy source is more stable and dense in this environment. There are several wheel kinetic harvesters on the market, ranging from low-complexity dynamos used to power bicycle lights to smart harvester systems that harvest kinetic energy while braking and cycling and store it for when it is needed to power sensors and other electronics loads. Perhaps the hub and the “bottle” dynamos are the most commercially successful systems because of their cost-effective design. Furthermore, the bottle generator is very inexpensive, yet it suffers from significant energy losses and is unreliable in wet weather due to mechanical friction and wheel slippage in the wheel/generator contact. This paper proposes a cost-effective bicycle harvester based on a novel kinetic-electromagnetic transducer. The proposed harvester allows for the generation and storage of harnessed kinetic energy to power low-power electronics loads when the user requires it (e.g., cell phone charging, lighting). The proposed harvester is made up of a power processing unit, a battery, and an optimized transducer based on a Halbach magnet array. An extensive full-wave electromagnetic simulation was used to evaluate the proposed transducer. Circuit simulation was also used to validate the proposed power unit. The proposed harvester generates a simulated output power of 1.17 W with a power processing unit efficiency of 45.6% under a constant bicycle velocity of 30 km/h.

Funder

Pontificia Universidad Javeriana

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Signal Processing,Control and Systems Engineering

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