Energy Scavenging for Mobile and Wireless Electronics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Georgia Institute of Technology
Abstract
Energy harvesting has grown from long-established concepts into devices for powering ubiquitously deployed sensor networks and mobile electronics. Systems can scavenge power from human activity or derive limited energy from ambient heat, light, radio, or vibrations. Ongoing power management developments enable battery-powered electronics to live longer. Such advances include dynamic optimization of voltage and clock rate, hybrid analog-digital designs, and clever wake-up procedures that keep the electronics mostly inactive. Exploiting renewable energy resources in the device's environment, however, offers a power source limited by the device's physical survival rather than an adjunct energy store. Energy…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 168.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Energy harvesting
- Electronics
- Computer science
- Electrical engineering
- Power electronics
- Power management
- Renewable energy
- Wireless
- Affordable and clean energy