Ok, some simplifications later i got a proof of concept on the charge pump idea:
The flip-flop consumes about 6μA, the switch side consumes less than i can measure.
From 1.5mA at 0.45V this gets about 250μA at 1V of raw output, and is quite capable of maintaining itself once the big capacitor is charged over 2.4V.
The voltage gain is close to clear 8x.
I haven't tried to optimize the design yet - frequency (~70Hz) or capacitor sizes might be way off optimal.
Also, the power leaks out if the source voltage drops - might need a schottky diode between the last stage and the big capacitor.
So, how can this be improved?
Anyone knows how to make a sub-μA square wave oscillator for ~100Hz?
sophiecentaur said:
Rather than getting carried away with interesting sidelines, why not take an engineering approach?
Engineering approach would be to buy a battery. :)
For the cost of tapping this "free energy" i can get a box of watch batteries which would each supply a small sensor board for years.
So, I'm mostly interested in how much i can get out of the cell.
It seems to be capable of 1mW total under best conditions, and 100μW at worst i consider.