51 research outputs found
Investigation of high bandwith biodevices for transcutaneous wireless telemetry
PhD ThesisBIODEVICE implants for telemetry are increasingly applied today in various areas
applications. There are many examples such as; telemedicine, biotelemetry, health care,
treatments for chronic diseases, epilepsy and blindness, all of which are using a wireless
infrastructure environment. They use microelectronics technology for diagnostics or monitoring
signals such as Electroencephalography or Electromyography. Conceptually the biodevices are
defined as one of these technologies combined with transcutaneous wireless implant telemetry
(TWIT). A wireless inductive coupling link is a common way for transferring the RF power and
data, to communicate between a reader and a battery-less implant. Demand for higher data rate
for the acquisition data returned from the body is increasing, and requires an efficient modulator
to achieve high transfer rate and low power consumption. In such applications, Quadrature Phase
Shift Keying (QPSK) modulation has advantages over other schemes, and double the symbol rate
with respect to Binary Phase Shift Keying (BPSK) over the same spectrum band. In contrast to
analogue modulators for generating QPSK signals, where the circuit complexity and power
dissipation are unsuitable for medical purposes, a digital approach has advantages. Eventually a
simple design can be achieved by mixing the hardware and software to minimize size and power
consumption for implantable telemetry applications. This work proposes a new approach to
digital modulator techniques, applied to transcutaneous implantable telemetry applications;
inherently increasing the data rate and simplifying the hardware design. A novel design for a
QPSK VHDL modulator to convey a high data rate is demonstrated. Essentially, CPLD/FPGA
technology is used to generate hardware from VHDL code, and implement the device which
performs the modulation. This improves the data transmission rate between the reader and
biodevice. This type of modulator provides digital synthesis and the flexibility to reconfigure and
upgrade with the two most often languages used being VHDL and Verilog (IEEE Standard)
being used as hardware structure description languages. The second objective of this thesis is to
improve the wireless coupling power (WCP). An efficient power amplifier was developed and a
new algorithm developed for auto-power control design at the reader unit, which monitors the
implant device and keeps the device working within the safety regulation power limits (SAR). The proposed system design has also been modeled and simulated with MATLAB/Simulink to
validate the modulator and examine the performance of the proposed modulator in relation to its
specifications.Higher Education Ministry in Liby
Wireless power and data transmission to high-performance implantable medical devices
Novel techniques for high-performance wireless power transmission and data interfacing with implantable medical devices (IMDs) were proposed. Several system- and circuit-level techniques were developed towards the design of a novel wireless data and power transmission link for a multi-channel inductively-powered wireless implantable neural-recording and stimulation system. Such wireless data and power transmission techniques have promising prospects for use in IMDs such as biosensors and neural recording/stimulation devices, neural interfacing experiments in enriched environments, radio-frequency identification (RFID), smartcards, near-field communication (NFC), wireless sensors, and charging mobile devices and electric vehicles. The contributions in wireless power transfer are the development of an RFID-based closed-loop power transmission system, a high-performance 3-coil link with optimal design procedure, circuit-based theoretical foundation for magnetic-resonance-based power transmission using multiple coils, a figure-of-merit for designing high-performance inductive links, a low-power and adaptive power management and data transceiver ASIC to be used as a general-purpose power module for wireless electrophysiology experiments, and a Q-modulated inductive link for automatic load matching. In wireless data transfer, the contributions are the development of a new modulation technique called pulse-delay modulation for low-power and wideband near-field data communication and a pulse-width-modulation impulse-radio ultra-wideband transceiver for low-power and wideband far-field data transmission.Ph.D
Modulated Backscatter for Low-Power High-Bandwidth Communication
<p>This thesis re-examines the physical layer of a communication link in order to increase the energy efficiency of a remote device or sensor. Backscatter modulation allows a remote device to wirelessly telemeter information without operating a traditional transceiver. Instead, a backscatter device leverages a carrier transmitted by an access point or base station.</p><p>A low-power multi-state vector backscatter modulation technique is presented where quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) signalling is generated without running a traditional transceiver. Backscatter QAM allows for significant power savings compared to traditional wireless communication schemes. For example, a device presented in this thesis that implements 16-QAM backscatter modulation is capable of streaming data at 96 Mbps with a radio communication efficiency of 15.5 pJ/bit. This is over 100x lower energy per bit than WiFi (IEEE 802.11).</p><p>This work could lead to a new class of high-bandwidth sensors or implantables with power consumption far lower than traditional radios.</p>Dissertatio
Doctor of Philosophy
dissertationSince the late 1950s, scientists have been working toward realizing implantable devices that would directly monitor or even control the human body's internal activities. Sophisticated microsystems are used to improve our understanding of internal biological processes in animals and humans. The diversity of biomedical research dictates that microsystems must be developed and customized specifically for each new application. For advanced long-term experiments, a custom designed system-on-chip (SoC) is usually necessary to meet desired specifications. Custom SoCs, however, are often prohibitively expensive, preventing many new ideas from being explored. In this work, we have identified a set of sensors that are frequently used in biomedical research and developed a single-chip integrated microsystem that offers the most commonly used sensor interfaces, high computational power, and which requires minimum external components to operate. Included peripherals can also drive chemical reactions by setting the appropriate voltages or currents across electrodes. The SoC is highly modular and well suited for prototyping in and ex vivo experimental devices. The system runs from a primary or secondary battery that can be recharged via two inductively coupled coils. The SoC includes a 16-bit microprocessor with 32 kB of on chip SRAM. The digital core consumes 350 μW at 10 MHz and is capable of running at frequencies up to 200 MHz. The integrated microsystem has been fabricated in a 65 nm CMOS technology and the silicon has been fully tested. Integrated peripherals include two sigma-delta analog-to-digital converters, two 10-bit digital-to-analog converters, and a sleep mode timer. The system also includes a wireless ultra-wideband (UWB) transmitter. The fullydigital transmitter implementation occupies 68 x 68 μm2 of silicon area, consumes 0.72 μW static power, and achieves an energy efficiency of 19 pJ/pulse at 200 MHz pulse repetition frequency. An investigation of the suitability of the UWB technology for neural recording systems is also presented. Experimental data capturing the UWB signal transmission through an animal head are presented and a statistical model for large-scale signal fading is developed
Design of Low-Power Short-Distance Transceiver for Wireless Sensor Networks
Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH
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Design of an Integrated CMOS Transceiver with Wireless Power and Data Telemetry with Application to Implantable Flexible Neural Probes
Recent developments in implantable medical devices (IMDs) have created a need for communication systems integrated directly into the implant with feedback data for various sensing systems. The need for modern communication techniques, power delivery systems, and usable interfaces for smart implants present an interesting challenge for engineers trying to provide doctors and medical professionals with the best resources available for medical research.
This dissertation will cover the design of an integrated CMOS transceiver and near-field inductive link used for an IMD and the accompanying CMOS front end for the application space of neural recording in the brain of lab mice. The design process of the CMOS IC, along with thinning techniques, the nearfield inductive link, and the design of an external reading system will be discussed in detail. The various wireless power and data telemetry techniques applicable for IMDs and their strengths and weaknesses will also be described. Software techniques and implementation for real-time analysis of a high data rate communication system from the designed IMD will be covered. Finally, transceiver verification will be given for both power and data telemetry under various scenarios, with front end verification performed via controlled lab bench experiments using input sinusoidal wave forms
Antenna Systems
This book offers an up-to-date and comprehensive review of modern antenna systems and their applications in the fields of contemporary wireless systems. It constitutes a useful resource of new material, including stochastic versus ray tracing wireless channel modeling for 5G and V2X applications and implantable devices. Chapters discuss modern metalens antennas in microwaves, terahertz, and optical domain. Moreover, the book presents new material on antenna arrays for 5G massive MIMO beamforming. Finally, it discusses new methods, devices, and technologies to enhance the performance of antenna systems
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