Title :
A 13.56-Mbps Pulse Delay Modulation Based Transceiver for Simultaneous Near-Field Data and Power Transmission
Author :
Kiani, Mehdi ; Ghovanloo, Maysam
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract :
A fully-integrated near-field wireless transceiver has been presented for simultaneous data and power transmission across inductive links, which operates based on pulse delay modulation (PDM) technique. PDM is a low-power carrier-less modulation scheme that offers wide bandwidth along with robustness against strong power carrier interference, which makes it suitable for implantable neuroprosthetic devices, such as retinal implants. To transmit each bit, a pattern of narrow pulses are generated at the same frequency of the power carrier across the transmitter (Tx) data coil with specific time delays to initiate decaying ringing across the tuned receiver (Rx) data coil. This ringing shifts the zero-crossing times of the undesired power carrier interference on the Rx data coil, resulting in a phase shift between the signals across Rx power and data coils, from which the data bit stream can be recovered. A PDM transceiver prototype was fabricated in a 0.35- μm standard CMOS process, occupying 1.6 mm2. The transceiver achieved a measured 13.56 Mbps data rate with a raw bit error rate (BER) of 4.3×10-7 at 10 mm distance between figure-8 data coils, despite a signal-to-interference ratio (SIR) of -18.5 dB across the Rx data coil. At the same time, a class-D power amplifier, operating at 13.56 MHz, delivered 42 mW of regulated power across a separate pair of high-Q power coils, aligned with the data coils. The PDM data Tx and Rx power consumptions were 960 pJ/bit and 162 pJ/bit, respectively, at 1.8 V supply voltage.
Keywords :
biomedical communication; biomedical electronics; data communication; inductive power transmission; near-field communication; power supplies to apparatus; prosthetics; pulse frequency modulation; transceivers; 0.35- μm standard CMOS process; 13.56 Mbps data rate; 13.56-Mbps pulse delay modulation; PDM data Rx power consumptions; PDM data Tx power consumption; PDM technique; PDM transceiver prototype fabrication; Rx data coil signal phase shift; Rx power signal phase shift; SIR; Tx data coil; bit transmission; carrier-less modulation scheme; class-D power amplifier; data bit stream recovery; decaying ringing; distance 10 mm; figure-8 data coils; frequency 13.56 MHz; fully-integrated wireless transceiver; high-Q power coil pairs; implantable neuroprosthetic devices; inductive links; low-power modulation scheme; narrow pulse generation; near-field data transmission; near-field wireless transceiver; noise figure -18.5 dB; power 42 mW; pulse delay modulation technique; pulse delay modulation-based transceiver; raw BER; raw bit error rate; retinal implants; robustness; signal-to-interference ratio; simultaneous data-power transmission; specific transmitter time delays; strong power carrier interference; transmitter data coil; transmitter frequency; tuned receiver data coil; undesired power carrier interference; voltage 1.8 V; wide bandwidth; zero-crossing times; Clocks; Coils; Delays; Interference; Modulation; Power transmission; Transceivers; Implantable medical devices; impulse radio; inductive coupling; near-field transceiver; neuroprostheses; pulse delay modulation; wireless power transmission;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2014.2304956