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Breath sensors that are self-powered by design

ORAL

Abstract

Piezoelectric materials are widely used to generate electric charge from mechanical deformation or vice versa. These strategies are increasingly common in implantable medical devices, where sensing must be done on small scales. In the case of a flow rate sensor, a sensor's energy harvesting rate could be mapped to that flow rate, making it "Self-Powered by Design (SPD)". Prior fluids-based SPD work has focused on turbulence-driven resonance and has been largely empirical. Here we explore sub-resonance SPD sensing via a case study of human breathing. We present a model of self-powered piezoelectric sensing/harvesting and validate that model against experimental results. Our work offers a form of SPD sensing that scales down to micro- or nano-scales, where flows are locally laminar and wake-driven resonance is not an option, and offers a model-based roadmap for future SPD sensing solutions. We also use the model to theorize a new form of SPD sensing that can detect broadband flow information.

Publication: Fitzgerald, L., Lopez Ruiz, L., Zhu, J., Lach, J., Quinn, D. (2021). Breath sensors that are self-powered by design. Journal of the Royal Society Interface (under review).

Presenters

  • Lucy E Fitzgerald

Authors

  • Lucy E Fitzgerald

  • Luis Lopez Ruiz

    University of Virginia

  • Joseph Zhu

    University of Virginia

  • John Lach

    George Washington University

  • Danniel Quinn

    University of Virginia, Stanford University