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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21097178

ABSTRACT

A 170µW readout IC for a capacitive MEMS acceleration sensor was implemented in a 1.5V 0.13µm CMOS for high-end medical motion sensing applications. The accelerometer achieves a 45µg/vHz noise floor and a dynamic range larger than 87dB for a 400Hz bandwidth. Power reduction is achieved by introducing reset and common-mode feedback circuit techniques based on a non-unity-gain feedback configuration.


Subject(s)
Acceleration , Feedback , Monitoring, Physiologic/instrumentation , Movement/physiology , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Electronics, Medical/instrumentation , Humans , Micro-Electrical-Mechanical Systems
2.
Appl Opt ; 44(7): 1270-82, 2005 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15765707

ABSTRACT

Tapered- and straight-core fiber microlenses of hyperbolic shape are studied with the segmented beam propagation method (Se-BPM). This new formulation extends to a large scale the finite-difference time-domain method for calculating propagation of the wave field in guiding systems. It is based on partitioning an entire computational domain into subdomains along the direction of propagation. The Helmholtz equation can be solved directly for each subdomain, and an iterative procedure is used to propagate the field from one subdomain to another. The Se-BPM is compared with other approaches that are commonly used to analyze straight-core fiber microlen devices in the paraxial approximation. We deal mainly with small-spot-size fiber microlenses where this approximation does not apply. We show that the emergent beam is not Gaussian in the far field. Instead of the usual far-field characterization we propose a near-field characterization of the fiber microlens. This is possible with the near-field scanning optical microscopy technique.

3.
Appl Opt ; 43(11): 2272-84, 2004 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15098829

ABSTRACT

A methodology is described for phase restoration of an object function from differential interference contrast (DIC) images. The methodology involves collecting a set of DIC images in the same plane with different bias retardation between the two illuminating light components produced by a Wollaston prism. These images, together with one conventional bright-field image, allows for reduction of the phase deconvolution restoration problem from a highly complex nonlinear mathematical formulation to a set of linear equations that can be applied to resolve the phase for images with a relatively large number of pixels. Additionally, under certain conditions, an on-line atomic force imaging system that does not interfere with the standard DIC illumination modes resolves uncertainties in large topographical variations that generally lead to a basic problem in DIC imaging, i.e., phase unwrapping. Furthermore, the availability of confocal detection allows for a three-dimensional reconstruction with high accuracy of the refractive-index measurement of the object that is to be imaged. This has been applied to reconstruction of the refractive index of an arrayed waveguide in a region in which a defect in the sample is present. The results of this paper highlight the synergism of far-field microscopies integrated with scanned probe microscopies and restoration algorithms for phase reconstruction.

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