학술논문

A Power Management Unit for Battery-Less TEG Energy Harvesting With Low Voltage Self-Startup
Document Type
Conference
Source
2021 6th International Conference on Integrated Circuits and Microsystems (ICICM) Integrated Circuits and Microsystems (ICICM), 2021 6th International Conference on. :160-165 Oct, 2021
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Maximum power point trackers
Integrated circuits
Temperature sensors
Power system management
Voltage
Discharges (electric)
Sensors
energy harvesting
DC-DC converter
low voltage startup
maximum power point tracking (MPPT)
Language
Abstract
A battery-less thermoelectric energy harvesting power management integrated circuit (PMIC) with low self startup voltage is implemented in a 180 nm CMOS process. A two stage step-by-step self-startup circuit enables operation the system from input voltages as low as 10 mV. A maximum power point tracking (MPPT) circuit with a frequency trimming technique is employed to extract the maximum energy from the TEG under a smaller temperature gradient and improve the overall stability of the system. Zero-current sensing (ZCS) detects the position of zero current during the discharge of the inductor and ends the discharge process in time by using two comparator monitoring methods, greatly reducing the energy backflow at the load side and improving the conversion efficiency. With a minimum cold-start voltage of180 mV and a minimum operating voltage of10 mV, the average power consumption of the PMIC was 24.6 $\mu$W, the output voltage range was 1.7 V, and the end-to-end conversion efficiency of the boost converter was 78.3%.