10 research outputs found

    A TRANSCEIVER DESIGN FOR IMPLANTABLE MEDICAL DEVICES

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    Master'sMASTER OF ENGINEERIN

    Stepper microactuators driven by ultrasonic power transfer

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    Advances in miniature devices for biomedical applications are creating ever-increasing requirements for their continuous, long lasting, and reliable energy supply, particularly for implanted devices. As an alternative to bulky and cost inefficient batteries that require occasional recharging and replacement, energy harvesting and wireless power delivery are receiving increased attention. While the former is generally only suited for low-power diagnostic microdevices, the latter has greater potential to extend the functionality to include more energy demanding therapeutic actuation such as drug release, implant mechanical adjustment or microsurgery. This thesis presents a novel approach to delivering wireless power to remote medical microdevices with the aim of satisfying higher energy budgets required for therapeutic functions. The method is based on ultrasonic power delivery, the novelty being that actuation is powered by ultrasound directly rather than via piezoelectric conversion. The thesis describes a coupled mechanical system remotely excited by ultrasound and providing conversion of acoustic energy into motion of a MEMS mechanism using a receiving membrane coupled to a discrete oscillator. This motion is then converted into useful stepwise actuation through oblique mechanical impact. The problem of acoustic and mechanical impedance mismatch is addressed. Several analytical and numerical models of ultrasonic power delivery into the human body are developed. Major design challenges that have to be solved in order to obtain acceptable performance under specified operating conditions and with minimum wave reflections are discussed. A novel microfabrication process is described, and the resulting proof-of-concept devices are successfully characterized.Open Acces

    Communication and energy delivery architectures for personal medical devices

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 219-232).Advances in sensor technologies and integrated electronics are revolutionizing how humans access and receive healthcare. However, many envisioned wearable or implantable systems are not deployable in practice due to high energy consumption and anatomically-limited size constraints, necessitating large form-factors for external devices, or eventual surgical re-implantation procedures for in-vivo applications. Since communication and energy-management sub-systems often dominate the power budgets of personal biomedical devices, this thesis explores alternative usecases, system architectures, and circuit solutions to reduce their energy burden. For wearable applications, a system-on-chip is designed that both communicates and delivers power over an eTextiles network. The transmitter and receiver front-ends are at least an order of magnitude more efficient than conventional body-area networks. For implantable applications, two separate systems are proposed that avoid reimplantation requirements. The first system extracts energy from the endocochlear potential, an electrochemical gradient found naturally within the inner-ear of mammals, in order to power a wireless sensor. Since extractable energy levels are limited, novel sensing, communication, and energy management solutions are proposed that leverage duty-cycling to achieve enabling power consumptions that are at least an order of magnitude lower than previous work. Clinical measurements show the first system demonstrated to sustain itself with a mammalian-generated electrochemical potential operating as the only source of energy into the system. The second system leverages the essentially unlimited number of re-charge cycles offered by ultracapacitors. To ease patient usability, a rapid wireless capacitor charging architecture is proposed that employs a multi-tapped secondary inductive coil to provide charging times that are significantly faster than conventional approaches.by Patrick Philip Mercier.Ph.D

    Glucose-powered neuroelectronics

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-164).A holy grail of bioelectronics is to engineer biologically implantable systems that can be embedded without disturbing their local environments, while harvesting from their surroundings all of the power they require. As implantable electronic devices become increasingly prevalent in scientific research and in the diagnosis, management, and treatment of human disease, there is correspondingly increasing demand for devices with unlimited functional lifetimes that integrate seamlessly with their hosts in these two ways. This thesis presents significant progress toward establishing the feasibility of one such system: A brain-machine interface powered by a bioimplantable fuel cell that harvests energy from extracellular glucose in the cerebrospinal fluid surrounding the brain. The first part of this thesis describes a set of biomimetic algorithms and low-power circuit architectures for decoding electrical signals from ensembles of neurons in the brain. The decoders are intended for use in the context of neural rehabilitation, to provide paralyzed or otherwise disabled patients with instantaneous, natural, thought-based control of robotic prosthetic limbs and other external devices. This thesis presents a detailed discussion of the decoding algorithms, descriptions of the low-power analog and digital circuit architectures used to implement the decoders, and results validating their performance when applied to decode real neural data. A major constraint on brain-implanted electronic devices is the requirement that they consume and dissipate very little power, so as not to damage surrounding brain tissue. The systems described here address that constraint, computing in the style of biological neural networks, and using arithmetic-free, purely logical primitives to establish universal computing architectures for neural decoding. The second part of this thesis describes the development of an implantable fuel cell powered by extracellular glucose at concentrations such as those found in the cerebrospinal fluid surrounding the brain. The theoretical foundations, details of design and fabrication, mechanical and electrochemical characterization, as well as in vitro performance data for the fuel cell are presented.by Benjamin Isaac Rapoport.Ph.D

    Low power circuits and systems for wireless neural stimulation

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 155-161).Electrical stimulation of tissues is an increasingly valuable tool for treating a variety of disorders, with applications including cardiac pacemakers, cochlear implants, visual prostheses, deep brain stimulators, spinal cord stimulators, and muscle stimulators. Brain implants for paralysis treatments are increasingly providing sensory feedback via neural stimulation. Within the field of neuroscience, the perturbation of neuronal circuits wirelessly in untethered, freely-behaving animals is of particular importance. In implantable systems, power consumption is often the limiting factor in determining battery or power coil size, cost, and level of tissue heating, with stimulation circuitry typically dominating the power budget of the entire implant. Thus, there is strong motivation to improve the energy efficiency of implantable electrical stimulators. In this thesis, I present two examples of low-power tissue stimulators. The first type is a wireless, low-power neural stimulation system for use in freely behaving animals. The system consists of an external transmitter and a miniature, implantable wireless receiver-and-stimulator utilizing a custom integrated chip built in a standard 0.5 ptm CMOS process. Low power design permits 12 days of continuous experimentation from a 5 mAh battery, extended by an automatic sleep mode that reduces standby power consumption by 2.5x. To test this device, bipolar stimulating electrodes were implanted into the songbird motor nucleus HVC of zebra finches. Single-neuron recordings revealed that wireless stimulation of HVC led to a strong increase of spiking activity in its downstream target, the robust nucleus of the arcopallium (RA). When this device was used to deliver biphasic pulses of current randomly during singing, singing activity was prematurely terminated in all birds tested. The second stimulator I present is a novel, energy-efficient electrode stimulator with feedback current regulation. This stimulator uses inductive storage and recycling of energy based on a dynamic power supply to drive an electrode in an adiabatic fashion such that energy consumption is minimized. Since there are no explicit current sources or current limiters, wasteful energy dissipation across such elements is naturally avoided. The stimulator also utilizes a shunt current-sensor to monitor and regulate the current through the electrode via feedback, thus enabling flexible and safe stimulation. The dynamic power supply allows efficient transfer of energy both to and from the electrode, and is based on a DC-DC converter topology that is used in a bidirectional fashion. In an exemplary electrode implementation, I show how the stimulator combines the efficiency of voltage control and the safety and accuracy of current control in a single low-power integrated-circuit built in a standard 0.35 pm CMOS process. I also perform a theoretical analysis of the energy efficiency that is in accord with experimental measurements. In its current proof-of-concept implementation, this stimulator achieves a 2x-3x reduction in energy consumption as compared to a conventional current-source-based stimulator operating from a fixed power supply.by Scott Kenneth Arfin.Ph.D

    Neural networks-on-chip for hybrid bio-electronic systems

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    PhD ThesisBy modelling the brains computation we can further our understanding of its function and develop novel treatments for neurological disorders. The brain is incredibly powerful and energy e cient, but its computation does not t well with the traditional computer architecture developed over the previous 70 years. Therefore, there is growing research focus in developing alternative computing technologies to enhance our neural modelling capability, with the expectation that the technology in itself will also bene t from increased awareness of neural computational paradigms. This thesis focuses upon developing a methodology to study the design of neural computing systems, with an emphasis on studying systems suitable for biomedical experiments. The methodology allows for the design to be optimized according to the application. For example, di erent case studies highlight how to reduce energy consumption, reduce silicon area, or to increase network throughput. High performance processing cores are presented for both Hodgkin-Huxley and Izhikevich neurons incorporating novel design features. Further, a complete energy/area model for a neural-network-on-chip is derived, which is used in two exemplar case-studies: a cortical neural circuit to benchmark typical system performance, illustrating how a 65,000 neuron network could be processed in real-time within a 100mW power budget; and a scalable highperformance processing platform for a cerebellar neural prosthesis. From these case-studies, the contribution of network granularity towards optimal neural-network-on-chip performance is explored

    Modern Telemetry

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    Telemetry is based on knowledge of various disciplines like Electronics, Measurement, Control and Communication along with their combination. This fact leads to a need of studying and understanding of these principles before the usage of Telemetry on selected problem solving. Spending time is however many times returned in form of obtained data or knowledge which telemetry system can provide. Usage of telemetry can be found in many areas from military through biomedical to real medical applications. Modern way to create a wireless sensors remotely connected to central system with artificial intelligence provide many new, sometimes unusual ways to get a knowledge about remote objects behaviour. This book is intended to present some new up to date accesses to telemetry problems solving by use of new sensors conceptions, new wireless transfer or communication techniques, data collection or processing techniques as well as several real use case scenarios describing model examples. Most of book chapters deals with many real cases of telemetry issues which can be used as a cookbooks for your own telemetry related problems

    Technology 2003: Conference Proceedings from the Fourth National Technology Transfer Conference and Exposition, Volume 1

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    Proceedings from symposia of the Technology 2003 Conference and Exposition, December 7-9, I993, Anaheim, CA. Volume 1 features the Plenary Session and the Plenary Workshop, plus papers presented in Advanced Manufacturing, Biotechnology/Medical Technology, Environmental Technology, Materials Science, and Power and Energy

    Microfluidics for Biosensing

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    There are 12 papers published with 8 research articles, 3 review articles and 1 perspective. The topics cover: Biomedical microfluidics Lab-on-a-chip Miniaturized systems for chemistry and life science (MicroTAS) Biosensor development and characteristics Imaging and other detection technologies Imaging and signal processing Point-of-care testing microdevices Food and water quality testing and control We hope this collection could promote the development of microfluidics and point-of-care testing (POCT) devices for biosensing
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