Paper
17 May 2011 A high-temperature acoustic-electric system for power delivery and data communication through thick metallic barriers
T. J. Lawry, K. R. Wilt, S. Roa-Prada, J. D. Ashdown, G. J. Saulnier, H. A. Scarton, P. K. Das, A. J. Gavens
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In many sensing applications that monitor extreme environmental conditions within sealed metallic vessels, penetrating vessel walls in order to feed through power and data cables is impractical, as this may compromise a vessels structural integrity and its environmental isolation. Frequent servicing of sensing equipment within these environments is costly, so the use of batteries is strongly undesired and power harvesting techniques are preferred. Traditional electromagnetic power delivery and communication techniques, however, are highly ineffective in these applications, due to Faraday shielding effects from the metallic vessel walls. A viable, non-destructive alternative is to use piezoelectric materials to transmit power through thick metallic barriers acoustically. We present critical elements of a high-temperature battery-less sensor system prototype, including power harvesting, voltage regulation, and data communication circuitry able to operate up to 260°C. Power transmission is achieved by coaxially aligning a pair of high-temperature piezoelectric transducers on opposite sides of a thick steel barrier. Continuous-wave excitation of the outside transducer creates an acoustic beam that is captured by the opposite transducer, forming an acoustic-electric link for power harvesting circuitry. Simultaneously, sensor data can be transmitted out of the high-temperature environment by switching the electrical impedance placed across the leads of the inside transducer, creating a reflection-based amplitude modulated signal on the outside transducer. Transducer housing, loading, and alternatives for acoustic couplants are discussed. Measurement results are presented, and it was found that the system can harvest up to 1 watt of power and communicate sensor data up to 50 kbps, while operating at 260°C.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
T. J. Lawry, K. R. Wilt, S. Roa-Prada, J. D. Ashdown, G. J. Saulnier, H. A. Scarton, P. K. Das, and A. J. Gavens "A high-temperature acoustic-electric system for power delivery and data communication through thick metallic barriers", Proc. SPIE 8035, Energy Harvesting and Storage: Materials, Devices, and Applications II, 80351D (17 May 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.884014
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Cited by 10 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Transducers

Sensors

Telecommunications

Acoustics

Modulation

Capacitors

Data communications

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