DocumentCode :
86864
Title :
A Fully-Implantable Cochlear Implant SoC With Piezoelectric Middle-Ear Sensor and Arbitrary Waveform Neural Stimulation
Author :
Yip, Marcus ; Rui Jin ; Nakajima, Hideko Heidi ; Stankovic, Konstantina M. ; Chandrakasan, Anantha P.
Author_Institution :
Microsyst. Technol. Labs., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume :
50
Issue :
1
fYear :
2015
fDate :
Jan. 2015
Firstpage :
214
Lastpage :
229
Abstract :
A system-on-chip for an invisible, fully-implantable cochlear implant is presented. Implantable acoustic sensing is achieved by interfacing the SoC to a piezoelectric sensor that detects the sound-induced motion of the middle ear. Measurements from human cadaveric ears demonstrate that the sensor can detect sounds between 40 and 90 dB SPL over the speech bandwidth. A highly-reconfigurable digital sound processor enables system power scalability by reconfiguring the number of channels, and provides programmable features to enable a patient-specific fit. A mixed-signal arbitrary waveform neural stimulator enables energy-optimal stimulation pulses to be delivered to the auditory nerve. The energy-optimal waveform is validated with in-vivo measurements from four human subjects which show a 15% to 35% energy saving over the conventional rectangular waveform. Prototyped in a 0.18 μm high-voltage CMOS technology, the SoC in 8-channel mode consumes 572 μW of power including stimulation. The SoC integrates implantable acoustic sensing, sound processing, and neural stimulation on one chip to minimize the implant size, and proof-of-concept is demonstrated with measurements from a human cadaver ear.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; cochlear implants; ear; microphones; neurophysiology; piezoelectric devices; sensors; system-on-chip; Implantable acoustic sensing; arbitrary waveform neural stimulation; auditory nerve; energy-optimal stimulation pulses; energy-optimal waveform; ful-implantable cochlear implant SoC; high-voltage CMOS technology; highly-reconfigurable digital sound processor; human cadaveric ears; human subjects; in-vivo measurements; mixed-signal arbitrary waveform neural stimulator; piezoelectric middle-ear sensor; power scalability; programmable features; rectangular waveform; sound-induced motion; speech bandwidth; system-on-chip; Auditory system; Cochlear implants; Ear; Electrodes; Noise; System-on-chip; Transfer functions; Arbitrary waveform; SoC; cochlear implant; energy-efficient; hearing loss; implantable; low-voltage; microphone; middle ear; piezoelectric; reconfigurable; stimulation; ultra-low-power;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9200
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2014.2355822
Filename :
6910323
Link To Document :
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