DocumentCode :
262357
Title :
18.7 A remotely controlled locomotive IC driven by electrolytic bubbles and wireless powering
Author :
Po-Hung Kuo ; Jian-Yu Hsieh ; Yi-Chun Huang ; Yu-Jie Huang ; Rong-Da Tsai ; Tao Wang ; Hung-Wei Chiu ; Shey-Shi Lu
Author_Institution :
Nat. Taiwan Univ., Taipei, Taiwan
fYear :
2014
fDate :
9-13 Feb. 2014
Firstpage :
322
Lastpage :
323
Abstract :
As implantable medical CMOS devices become a reality [1], motion control of such implantable devices has become the next challenge in the advanced integrated micro-system domain. With integrated sensors and a controllable propulsion mechanism, a micro-system will be able to perform tumor scan, drug delivery, neuron stimulation, bio-test, etc, in a revolutionary way and with minimum injury. Such devices are especially suitable for human hollow organs, such as urinary bladder and stomach. Motivated by the art reported in ISSCC 2012 [2], we demonstrate a remotely-controlled locomotive CMOS IC which is realized in TSMC 0.35μm technology. As illustrated in Fig. 18.7.1, a bare CMOS chip flipped on a liquid surface can be moved to the desired position without any wire connections. Instead of Lorentz forces [2], this chip utilizes the gas pressure resulting from electrolytic bubbles as the propulsive force. By appointing voltages to the on-chip electrolysis electrodes, one can decide the electrolysis location and thereby control the bubbles emissions as well as the direction of motion. With power management circuits, wireless receiver and micro-control unit (MCU), the received signal can be exploited as the movement control as well as wireless power. Experiments show a moving speed of 0.3mm/s of this chip. The total size is 21.2mm2 and the power consumption of the integrated circuits and the electrolysis electrodes are 125.4μW and 82μW, respectively.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; biomedical electrodes; bubbles; drug delivery systems; electrochemical electrodes; electrochemical sensors; electrolysis; injuries; microsensors; neurophysiology; power consumption; power supply circuits; prosthetics; radio receivers; radiofrequency power transmission; tumours; CMOS chip; Lorentz forces; MCU; TSMC; biotest; drug delivery system; electrolysis electrodes; electrolytic bubbles; gas pressure; human hollow organs; implantable medical CMOS devices; injury; integrated circuits; integrated microsystem domain; integrated sensors; microcontrol unit; motion control; neuron stimulation; on-chip electrolysis electrodes; power management circuits; remotely-controlled locomotive CMOS IC; stomach; tumor scan; urinary bladder; wireless power; wireless receiver; Amplitude shift keying; Biomedical measurement; Electrochemical processes; Electrodes; Integrated circuits; Voltage control; Wireless communication;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers (ISSCC), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
ISSN :
0193-6530
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0918-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISSCC.2014.6757453
Filename :
6757453
Link To Document :
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