On the Improved Modeling of the Magnetoelastic Force in a Vibrational Energy Harvesting System

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ORIGINAL PAPER

On the Improved Modeling of the Magnetoelastic Force in a Vibrational Energy Harvesting System Max‑Uwe Noll1 · Lukas Lentz1 · Utz von Wagner1 Received: 29 December 2018 / Revised: 29 April 2019 / Accepted: 12 June 2019 © Krishtel eMaging Solutions Private Limited 2019

Abstract Objective  The efficiency of vibrational energy harvesting systems that consist of a cantilever beam with attached piezoceramic layers can be increased by intentionally introducing nonlinearities. These nonlinearities are often implemented in the form of permanent magnets near the beam’s free end. The influence of these magnets is typically assumed to be a single transverse force that depends cubically on the displacement of the beam tip. The coefficients of a corresponding single degree of freedom model are often found heuristically, without an explicit modeling of the magnetoelastic force. Methods  In this paper, we present and assess the validity of a procedure to determine the magnetoelastic forces acting on the beam from physical laws of the magnetic field with corresponding parameters. The paper outlines the method itself, describing initially how the magnetic field is computed by a Finite Element simulation. In the second step, the total transverse force on the beam is determined from the magnetic field by means of a numerical evaluation of the Maxwell stress tensor. The required minimum degree of a suitable polynomial force approximation of the numeric values is discussed briefly. The validity of this model is then considered by investigating its bifurcation behavior with respect to mono-, bi-, and tristability for different distances between the magnets and comparing the findings to results found by experiments. Results  While the model’s predictions of the number of equilibrium positions for any magnet distance are generally in good agreement with results of experiments, there are deviations when it comes to the exact positions of the equilibria. With respect to these findings, the limitations of a two-dimensional magnetic field modeling with only linear material models are addressed. Conclusion  The paper concludes that the method outlined here is a step toward the deduction of a detailed model based on physical laws of the magnetic field with corresponding parameters replacing simple heuristic polynomial magnetic force laws. Keywords  Energy harvesting · Bistable oscillator · Magnetoelastic force · Maxwell stress tensor

Introduction Over the past few years, the interest in power extraction from ambient energy sources has grown, as they allow the support, e.g., of autonomous sensor systems for structural health monitoring or in general autonomous microelectronics due to the steadily decreasing power consumption of such systems. Vibrational energy harvesting systems generate electrical energy from ambient mechanical vibrations, which energy would otherwise be lost. A review of existing research on this topic can be found, e.g., in [1–3]. * Max‑Uwe Noll max‑uwe.noll@tu‑berlin.de 1



Chair of Mechatronics and Machi