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Next Generation Energy-Harvesting Electronics - Holistic Approach


Holistic Energy Harvesting

We are entering an era of electronic systems powered, or at least augmented, by energy harvesters. Future self-powered applications will require electronic systems that are more complex and compact but also intelligent, adaptive and able to perform more computation with less energy. “Next Generation Energy-Harvesting Electronics: Holistic Approach” is a £1.6M collaborative research project funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) which began in November 2009. The project consortium consists of over 20 people at four Universities (Southampton, Imperial, Newcastle and Bristol) working in collaboration with five industrial partners: QinetiQ, Diodes Inc., ARM, NXP, and Mentor Graphics.

The project recognises the high level of interaction in an energy harvesting system, from the design and properties of the micro-generator and power conversion electronics, to the design and architecture of the load and the algorithms and applications that operate on it. This approach aims to maximise the available harvested energy and the efficiency with which it is used, and is fundamental to ultra energy-efficient design and to the miniaturisation of next-generation wireless electronics. These developments are needed in emerging application areas, including pervasive healthcare and autonomous environmental and industrial monitoring.

The three themes of the project are:

The project will deliver a range of research outputs, and includes the creation of demonstrators for the concepts in each theme and also of the project as a whole, highlighting the importance of ‘holistic’ design in this field. The three research themes are key areas that require interdisciplinary and inter-institutional collaboration. The key differentiator of this project is that, due to the strong interaction between themes, they cannot be achieved in isolation (instead requiring a multi-disciplinary consortium taking a holistic design approach). This design approach is fundamental to ultra energy-efficient design and to the miniaturisation of next-generation wireless electronics.

For further information, please visit www.holistic.ecs.soton.ac.uk.

Homepage: http://www.holistic.ecs.soton.ac.uk
Type: Normal Research Project
Research Groups: Electronic Systems and Devices Group, Electronics and Electrical Engineering
Themes: Energy Harvesting, Modeling and Simulation, Systems Design, Energy Harvesting & Sensing Devices, Low-Energy Sustainable Systems, Low-Energy Sustainable Systems
Dates: 1st October 2009 to 30th September 2012

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