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Published March 2021 | public
Journal Article

A Biofuel-Cell-Based Energy Harvester With 86% Peak Efficiency and 0.25-V Minimum Input Voltage Using Source-Adaptive MPPT

Abstract

This article presents an efficient cold-starting energy harvester system, fabricated in 65-nm CMOS. The proposed harvester uses no external electrical components and is compatible with biofuel-cell (BFC) voltage and power ranges. A power-efficient system architecture is proposed to keep the internal circuitry operating at 0.4 V while regulating the output voltage at 1 V using switched-capacitor dc–dc converters and a hysteretic controller. A startup enhancement block is presented to facilitate cold startup with any arbitrary input voltage. A real-time on-chip 2-D maximum power point tracking with source degradation tracing is also implemented to maintain power efficiency maximized over time. The system performs cold startup with a minimum input voltage of 0.39 V and continues its operation if the input voltage degrades to as low as 0.25 V. Peak power efficiency of 86% is achieved at 0.39 V of input voltage and 1.34 μW of output power with 220 nW of average power consumption of the chip. The end-to-end power efficiency is kept above 70% for a wide range of loading powers from 1 to 12 μW. The chip is integrated with a pair of lactate BFC electrodes with 2 mm of diameter on a prototype-printed circuit board (PCB). Integrated operation of the chip with the electrodes and a lactate solution is demonstrated.

Additional Information

© 2020 IEEE. Manuscript received June 4, 2020; revised August 14, 2020 and September 28, 2020; accepted October 22, 2020. Date of publication November 17, 2020; date of current version February 24, 2021. This article was approved by Associate Editor Qun Jane Gu. The authors would like to thank the contributions of S. Sharma, S. Shah, and F. Aghlmand from Mixed-mode Integrated Circuits and Systems (MICS) Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Caltech High-speed Integrated Circuits (CHIC) Laboratory, Caltech, members for their help with prototype printed circuit board (PCB) fabrication; and Muse Semiconductor for chip fabrication.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023