3 research outputs found
Advances in Solid State Circuit Technologies
This book brings together contributions from experts in the fields to describe the current status of important topics in solid-state circuit technologies. It consists of 20 chapters which are grouped under the following categories: general information, circuits and devices, materials, and characterization techniques. These chapters have been written by renowned experts in the respective fields making this book valuable to the integrated circuits and materials science communities. It is intended for a diverse readership including electrical engineers and material scientists in the industry and academic institutions. Readers will be able to familiarize themselves with the latest technologies in the various fields
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Integrated Circuit Design for Miniaturized, Trackable, Ultrasound Based Biomedical Implants
This thesis focuses on the design of an ultrasonography compatible implantable sensor platform, as a novel approach that implements a miniaturized, battery-less, real-time trackable parallel biosensing system. In addition to the frontend circuit, a sub-nW fully integrated pH sensor is designed in a way that can be easily integrated with the proposed sonography-compatible sensor platform. Combining the two integrated circuits together, the whole system will be able to map in vivo physiological information acquired from a distributed set of sensors on top of the ultrasound movie, leading to the idea envisioned as “augmented ultrasonography”.
Implemented in a 0.18 μm technology, an ultrasound power and data frontend circuit is designed to enable medical sensing implants to operate in an ultrasonography compatible way. When placed within the field of view of an imaging transducer, the frontend circuit harvests the power through a piece of piezo crystal from a minimally modified brightness-mode (B-mode) ultrasound imaging process that is commonly adopted in modern medical practices. The implant can also establish bi-directional data communication channels with the imaging transducer, allowing data to be transmitted in a way synchronized to the frame rate of the B-mode film. The design of the circuit is made possible by a combination of ultra-low-power circuit techniques and novel frontend circuit topologies, as imaging ultrasound waves in the form of short pulses with extremely low duty cycle poses challenges that has not previously seen in other implantable sensor systems. The proposed prototype achieves a total area of 0.6mm² for the integrated circuit (IC), as well as 71mm theoretical maximum implantable depth (up to 40 mm is verified experimentally). These two together give opportunities for this design to become the next generation solution for deep-tissue bio-sensing implants.
Realized using the same 0.18 μm technology, the fully integrated pH sensor is designed to deliver accurate pH readouts, at a reasonable speed of 1 sample per second, while consuming only 0.72 nW of power. Using an ion-sensitive field effect transistor (ISFET) and reference field effect transistor pair (REFET), the IC requires minimum additional post fabrication to deliver 10-bit resolution pH readouts at an end-to-end sensitivity of 65.8 LSB/pH. When working as a standalone device, this work advances the state-of-the-art of ISFET based pH sensor design. With an addition of 0.46 mm² of area, it is possible to integrate it with the ultrasound sonography compatible implant platform. This potential integration will further advance the vision of the augmented ultrasonography: real-time display of physiological information in a B-mode film, with the help from a distributed bio-sensor system for deep-tissue physiology monitoring
Disseny microelectrnic de circuits discriminadors de polsos pel detector LHCb
The aim of this thesis is to present a solution for implementing the front end system of the Scintillator Pad Detector (SPD) of the calorimeter system of the LHCb experiment that will start in 2008 at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. The requirements of this specific system are discussed and an integrated solution is presented, both at system and circuit level. We also report some methodological achievements. In first place, a method to study the PSRR (and any transfer function) in fully differential circuits taking into account the effect of parameter mismatch is proposed. Concerning noise analysis, a method to study time variant circuits in the frequency domain is presented and justified. This would open the possibility to study the effect of 1/f noise in time variants circuits. In addition, it will be shown that the architecture developed for this system is a general solution for front ends in high luminosity experiments that must be operated with no dead time and must be robust against ballistic deficit