Title :
A direct-sequence spread-spectrum communication system for integrated sensor microsystems
Author :
Aydin, Nizamettin ; Arslan, Tughrul ; Cumming, David R S
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Eng. & Electron., Univ. of Edinburgh, UK
fDate :
3/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Some of the most important challenges in health-care technologies have been identified to be development of noninvasive systems and miniaturization. In developing the core technologies, progress is required in pushing the limits of miniaturization, minimizing the costs and power consumption of microsystems components, developing mobile/wireless communication infrastructures and computing technologies that are reliable. The implementation of such miniaturized systems has become feasible by the advent of system-on-chip technology, which enables us to integrate most of the components of a system on to a single chip. One of the most important tasks in such a system is to convey information reliably on a multiple-access-based environment. When considering the design of telecommunication system for such a network, the receiver is the key performance critical block. The paper describes the application environment, the choice of the communication protocol, the implementation of the transmitter and receiver circuitry, and research work carried out on studying the impact of input data characteristics and internal data path complexity on area and power performance of the receiver. We provide results using a test data recorded from a pH sensor. The results demonstrate satisfying functionality, area, and power constraints even when a degree of programmability is incorporated in the system.
Keywords :
biomedical communication; health care; microsensors; mobile communication; spread spectrum communication; system-on-chip; SoC; communication protocol; computing technology; direct-sequence spread-spectrum communication system; health-care technology; integrated sensor microsystem; miniaturized system; mobile communication; multiple-access-based environment; noninvasive system development; pH sensor; receiver circuitry; sensor systems; system-on-chip technology; telecommunication system design; transmitter circuitry; wireless communication infrastructure; Computers; Costs; Energy consumption; Integrated circuit reliability; Mobile computing; Power system reliability; Sensor systems; Spread spectrum communication; System-on-a-chip; Wireless communication; Communication; sensor systems; spread spectrum; system-on-chip (SoC); Biosensing Techniques; Cellular Phone; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Feasibility Studies; Monitoring, Physiologic; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Systems Integration; Telecommunications; Telemetry; Transducers;
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TITB.2004.837825