Scavenged energy from ambient vibrations has become a promising energy supply for autonomous microsystems. However, restricted by device size, most MEMS vibration energy harvesters have much higher resonant frequencies than environmental vibrations, which reduces scavenged power and limits practical applicability. Herein, we propose a MEMS multimodal vibration energy harvester with specifically cascaded flexible PDMS and "zigzag" silicon beams to simultaneously lower the resonant frequency to the ultralow-frequency level and broaden the bandwidth. A two-stage architecture is designed, in which the primary subsystem consists of suspended PDMS beams characterized by a low Young's modulus, and the secondary system consists of zigzag silicon beams. We also propose a PDMS lift-off process to fabricate the suspended flexible beams and the compatible microfabrication method shows high yield and good repeatability. The fabricated MEMS energy harvester can operate at ultralow resonant frequencies of 3 and 23 Hz, with an NPD index of 1.73 μW/cm/g @ 3 Hz. The factors underlying output power degradation in the low-frequency range and potential enhancement strategies are discussed. This work offers new insights into achieving MEMS-scale energy harvesting with ultralow frequency response.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10033895PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41378-023-00500-8DOI Listing

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