Title :
Biological Channel Modeling and Implantable UWB Antenna Design for Neural Recording Systems
Author :
Bahrami, Hamid Reza ; Mirbozorgi, S.A. ; Rusch, Leslie A. ; Gosselin, B.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Laval Univ., Quebec City, QC, Canada
Abstract :
Ultrawideband (UWB) short-range communication systems have proved to be valuable in medical technology, particularly for implanted devices, due to their low-power consumption, low cost, small size, and high data rates. Neural activity monitoring in the brain requires high data rate (800 kb/s per neural sensor), and we target a system supporting a large number of sensors, in particular, aggregate transmission above 430 Mb/s (~512 sensors). Knowledge of channel behavior is required to determine the maximum allowable power to 1) respect ANSI guidelines for avoiding tissue damage, and 2) respect FCC guidelines on unlicensed transmissions. We utilize a realistic model of the biological channel to inform the design of antennas for the implanted transmitter and the external receiver under these requirements. Antennas placement is examined under two scenarios having contrasting power constraints. Performance of the system within the biological tissues is examined via simulation and experiment. Our miniaturized antennas, 12 mm x 12 mm, need worst-case receiver sensitivities of -38 and -30.5 dBm for the first and second scenarios, respectively. These sensitivities allow us to successfully detect signals transmitted through tissues in the 3.1-10.6-GHz UWB band.
Keywords :
biological tissues; biomedical electronics; biomedical telemetry; body sensor networks; brain models; electronic data interchange; low-power electronics; medical signal detection; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; patient monitoring; prosthetics; receivers; standards; telemedicine; transmitters; ultra wideband antennas; ANSI guideline; FCC guideline; aggregate transmission; antenna placement; biological channel modeling; biological tissue damage; brain neural activity monitoring; channel behavior knowledge; contrasting power constraint; external receiver; frequency 3.1 GHz to 10.6 GHz; high implanted device data rate; implantable UWB antenna design; implanted device cost; implanted device size; low-power consumption; maximum allowable power; medical technology; miniaturized antenna; neural recording system; neural sensor number; signal detection; signal transmission; simulation; size 12 mm; transmitter implant; ultrawideband short-range communication system; unlicensed transmission; worst-case receiver sensitivity; Biological tissues; Directive antennas; Receiving antennas; Transmitting antennas; Average specific absorption rate (ASAR); biological tissues; channel modeling; implantable antenna; neural recording; telemetry; ultrawideband;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2014.2339836