Title :
A Submicrowatt Implantable Capacitive Sensor System for Biomedical Applications
Author :
Nguyen Thanh Trung ; Hafliger, Philipp
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf., Oslo Univ., Oslo, Norway
Abstract :
This brief presents a submicrowatt, offset-free, and implantable system for a biomedical capacitive sensor. The system is powered by a 13.56-MHz radio frequency signal and performs sensor signal amplification, analog-to-digital conversion, and load-shift keying uplink data transmission within 640 μs. An ultralow-power capacitance-to-digital converter (CDC) is designed by replacing a power-hungry operational amplifier with a subthreshold inverter in a switched-capacitor amplifier (SC-amp) . A fast-response-gain compensation method is employed to reduce the gain error of the SC-amp while achieving high energy efficiency for the CDC. To eliminate the offset, a two-step autocalibration is applied. The application-specific integrated circuit is implemented in the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company 90-nm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology, and the whole system achieves an 8.02 effective number of bits with 9-bit linearity while consuming only 5.5 μW.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; application specific integrated circuits; biomedical electronics; biomedical equipment; calibration; capacitive sensors; operational amplifiers; CDC; analog-to-digital conversion; application specific integrated circuit; biomedical applications; biomedical capacitive sensor; complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology; fast response gain compensation method; load-shift keying uplink data transmission; power-hungry operational amplifier; radio frequency signal; sensor signal amplification; submicrowatt implantable capacitive sensor system; subthreshold inverter; switched-capacitor amplifier; two-step autocalibration; ultralow-power capacitance-to-digital converter; Capacitance; Capacitive sensors; Capacitors; Circuits and systems; Clocks; Gain; Inverters; Biomedical application; LSK; biomedical application; capacitive sensor; capacitive to digital circuit; capacitive-to-digital circuit; implantable chip; load-shift keying (LSK); telemetry; wireless;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems II: Express Briefs, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCSII.2014.2368260