posted on 2016-09-06, 00:00authored byKun Zhao, Zhong
Lin Wang, Ya Yang
Wireless
sensor networks will be responsible for a majority of
the fast growth in intelligent systems in the next decade. However,
most of the wireless smart sensor nodes require an external power
source such as a Li-ion battery, where the labor cost and environmental
waste issues of replacing batteries have largely limited the practical
applications. Instead of using a Li-ion battery, we report an ultrastable,
highly efficient, and superhydrophobic-surface-based triboelectric
nanogenerator (TENG) to scavenge wind energy for sustainably powering
a wireless smart temperature sensor node. There is no decrease in
the output voltage and current of the TENG after continuous working
for about 14 h at a wind speed of 12 m/s. Through a power management
circuit, the TENG can deliver a constant output voltage of 3.3 V and
a pulsed output current of about 100 mA to achieve highly efficient
energy storage in a capacitor. A wireless smart temperature sensor
node can be sustainably powered by the TENG for sending the real-time
temperature data to an iPhone under a working distance of 26 m, demonstrating
the feasibility of the self-powered wireless smart sensor networks.