DocumentCode
3147102
Title
A 15-Channel Wireless Neural Recording System Based on Time Division Multiplexing of Pulse Width Modulated Signals
Author
Yin, Ming ; Field, Ryani ; Ghovanloo, Maysam
Author_Institution
Bionics Lab., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC
fYear
2006
fDate
9-12 May 2006
Firstpage
297
Lastpage
300
Abstract
This paper describes a 15-channel wireless implantable neural recording (WINeR) system for long-term in vivo experiments. WINeRS consists of an implantable part that contains a system-on-a-chip (SoC) application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) and an external receiver. The 3 mmtimes3 mm ASIC is fabricated in the MOSIS AMI 0.5-mum 3-poly 3-metal n-well standard CMOS process. The chip contains 15 low-noise amplifier/filters, time division multiplexer (TDM), sample-and-hold (S&H), pulse width modulator (PWM), on-chip clock generator, 32-bit register for control commands, ISM-band VCO transmitter, reference generator, and inductive power management circuitry. The use of PWM technique has lowered power consumption, improved robustness against noise, and reduced complexity by eliminating ADC and its associated circuitry. A commercial FM receiver is used as the external part of the system. The received PWM signal is further demodulated off-line by a MATLAB program. Finally by time division demultiplexing the demodulated samples, the original neural signals are being reconstructed. A custom wideband receiver with real-time PWM/TDM demodulator/demultiplexer is currently under construction
Keywords
bioMEMS; biomedical electronics; biomedical telemetry; neurophysiology; pulse width modulation; system-on-chip; time division multiplexing; 0.5 micron; 15-channel wireless implantable neural recording system; 3 mm; ASIC; CMOS process; FM receiver; ISM-band VCO transmitter; MATLAB program; MOSIS; PWM; SOC; TDM; application-specific integrated circuit; implantable microelectronic devices; in vivo experiments; inductive power management circuitry; low-noise amplifier; on-chip clock generator; pulse width modulated signals; signal reconstruction; system-on-a-chip; time division multiplexing; Ambient intelligence; Application specific integrated circuits; CMOS process; In vivo; Power generation; Pulse generation; Pulse width modulation; Space vector pulse width modulation; System-on-a-chip; Time division multiplexing; ASIC; Implantable microelectronic devices; Pulse Width Modulation; Time Division Multiplexing; Wireless neural recording;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Microtechnologies in Medicine and Biology, 2006 International Conference on
Conference_Location
Okinawa
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0338-3
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0338-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MMB.2006.251555
Filename
4281373
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