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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38713579

ABSTRACT

This paper introduces a wirelessly powered scattered neural recording wearable system that can facilitate continuous, untethered, and long-term electroencephalogram (EEG) recording. The proposed system, including 32 standalone EEG recording devices and a central controller, is incorporated in a wearable form factor. The standalone devices are sparsely distributed on the scalp, allowing for flexible placement and varying quantities to provide extensive spatial coverage and scalability. Each standalone device featuring a low-power EEG recording application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) wirelessly receives power through a 60 MHz inductive link. The low-power ASIC design (84.6 µW) ensures sufficient wireless power reception through a small receiver (Rx) coil. The 60 MHz inductive link also serves as the data carrier for wireless communication between standalone devices and the central controller, eliminating the need for additional data antennas. All these efforts contribute to the miniaturization of standalone devices with dimensions of 12×12×5 mm3, enhancing device wearability. The central controller applies the pulse width modulation (PWM) scheme on the 60 MHz carrier, transmitting user commands at 4 Mbps to EEG recording ASICs. The ASIC employs a novel synchronized PWM demodulator to extract user commands, operating signal digitization and data transmission. The analog frontend (AFE) amplifies the EEG signal with a gain of 45 dB and applies band-pass filtering from 0.03 Hz to 400 Hz, with an input-referred noise (IRN) of 3.62 µVRMS. The amplified EEG signal is then digitized by a 10-bit successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) with a peak signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) of 55.4 dB. The resulting EEG data is transmitted to an external software-defined radio (SDR) Rx through load-shift-keying (LSK) backscatter at 3.75 Mbps. The system's functionality is fully evaluated in human experiments.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38437072

ABSTRACT

Utilizing injectable devices for monitoring animal health offers several advantages over traditional wearable devices, including improved signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and enhanced immunity to motion artifacts. We present a wireless application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for injectable devices. The ASIC has multiple physiological sensing modalities including body temperature monitoring, electrocardiography (ECG), and photoplethysmography (PPG). The ASIC fabricated using the CMOS 180 nm process is sized to fit into an injectable microchip implant. The ASIC features a low-power design, drawing an average DC power of 155.3 µW, enabling the ASIC to be wirelessly powered through an inductive link. To capture the ECG signal, we designed the ECG analog frontend (AFE) with 0.3 Hz low cut-off frequency and 45-79 dB adjustable midband gain. To measure PPG, we employ an energy-efficient and safe switched-capacitor-based (SC) light emitting diode (LED) driver to illuminate an LED with milliampere-level current pulses. A SC integrator-based AFE converts the current of photodiode with a programmable transimpedance gain. A resistor-based Wheatstone Bridge (WhB) temperature sensor followed by an instrumentation amplifier (IA) provides 27-47 °C sensing range with 0.02 °C inaccuracy. Recorded physiological signals are sequentially sampled and quantized by a 10-bit analog-to-digital converter (ADC) with the successive approximation register (SAR) architecture. The SAR ADC features an energy-efficient switching scheme and achieves a 57.5 dB signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) within 1 kHz bandwidth. Then, a back data telemetry transmits the baseband data via a backscatter scheme with intermediate-frequency assistance. The ASIC's overall functionality and performance has been evaluated through an in vivo experiment.

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