Development of a Radio Frequency Energy Harvesting System to Power Small Electronic Devices

Amanya Denis, Aliyu Hassan, Cartland Richard

Abstract


Autonomous electronic loads such as remote sensors, IoT modules, and hidden micro-devices lack convenient or continuous access to traditional power lines. This can be addressed by harvesting ambient radio-frequency energy. The project designed and constructed a prototype system comprising a ferrite-rod and long-wire monopole antenna tuned via a gang-capacitor network, a Schottky-diode half-wave rectifier, and supercapacitor energy storage. Under optimal tuning at approximately 1.1MHz, the rectifier delivered a peak DC voltage of 0.45V into a 1.315kΩ load, corresponding to a maximum harvested power of 0.154mW and an output current of 0.342mA. By charging two series 2.2F supercapacitors to 2.45V over 60minutes, the system demonstrated sufficient energy accumulation to support brief, duty-cycled operations such as periodic LED indicator without external batteries. These results confirm that ambient RF sources can be tapped for small-scale power, validating RF energy harvesting as a sustainable, maintenance-free solution for low-power autonomous devices. With further enhancements such as multi-band antennas, lower-threshold rectifiers, and adaptive impedance matching this technology holds promise for truly self-powered sensor networks and wearable systems. 


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References


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