25 research outputs found

    Wireless Power Transfer System for Battery-Less Body Implantable Devices

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringAs the life expectancy is increased and the welfare is promoted, researches on the body implantable medical devices (BIMD) are actively being carried out, and products providing more various functions are being released. On the other hand, due to these various functions, the power consumption of the BIMD is also increased, so that the primary battery alone cannot provide sufficient power for the devices. The limited capacity and life time of batteries force patients to make an additional payment and suffering for the power supply of the BIMD. Wireless power transfer technology is the technology which has been making remarkable progress mainly in wireless charging for personal portable devices and electric vehicles. Convergence of wireless power transfer technology (WPT) and rechargeable battery can extend the life time of the BIMD and reduce the suffering and the cost for battery replacements. Furthermore, WPT enables the devices which do not need to operate consistently such as body implantable sensor devices to be used without batteries. In this dissertation, techniques to support WPT for BIMD are introduced and proposed. First, basic researches on magnetic coupled WPT are presented. The basics which are important factors to analyze power transmission are introduced. In addition, circuits that make up the WPT system are described. There are three common technical challenges in WPT. Those are efficiency degradation on coil geometry, voltage gain variation with coil geometry, and power losses in WPT. The common challenges are discussed in chapter II. Moreover, additional challenges which are arisen in WPT for BIMD and approaches to resolve the challenges are addressed in chapter II. Then, efficiency improvement techniques and control techniques in WPT are presented in chapter III. The presented techniques to improve efficiency are applied in coil parts and circuit parts. In coil parts, efficiency enhancement technique by geometric variation is proposed. In circuit parts, instantaneous power consuming technique for step-down converter is suggested. Li-ion battery charger is also discussed in chapter III. Additionally, the wireless controlled constant current / constant voltage charging mode and the proposed step charging method are described. After that, WPT system for BIMD is discussed one by one with the proposed techniques for each part in chapter IV. A load transformation is suggested to improve efficiency in weak coupling, and suppress voltage gain variation under coil displacement. Power conversion efficiency improvement techniques for rectifier and converter are also proposed. By using the proposed technique for the converter, we can remove the bootstrap capacitors, and reduce the overall size of power circuits. In conclusion, techniques in coil parts and circuit parts to handle challenges in WPT for BIMD are fully investigated in this thesis in addition to the efficiency improvement and control techniques in common WPT. All the techniques are verified through simulations or experiments. The approaches realized in the thesis can be applied to other applications employing the WPT.clos

    Effects of aluminum doping on the structural and optical properties of ZnO nanorods grown on highly conductive films

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    ZnO nanorods were grown on similar to 50-nm-thick transparent conductive oxide thin films by hydrothermal synthesis. The resistivity of the ZnO films was lowered to 4x10(-4) Omega cm upon Ga doping. Zinc nitrate hexahydrate, mixed with hexamethylenetetramine, was dissolved in deionized water to prepare a synthesis solution. Aluminum nitrate nonahydrate was added to the synthesis solution to dope the Al into ZnO nanorods. X-ray diffraction analysis and field-emission scanning electron microscopy were conducted to study the crystal structure and morphology of the nanorods, respectively. Al doping enhanced the preferential orientation to (002) of a wurtzite structure and increased the compressive strain. The trace of Al in the ZnO nanorods was detected by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. The optical properties were investigated by measuring the transmittance, Raman shift, and photoluminescence. Al doping led to a blue shift or red shift in the energy band gap. The results of the Raman shift confirmed the compressive stress in the ZnO nanorods. Sharp ultraviolet (UV) and broad visible photoluminescence peaks were obtained irrespective of Al concentration in the ZnO nanorods. The intensity of the UV peak doubled by Al doping

    An excessive current subtraction technique to improve dynamic range for touch screen panel applications

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    A current subtraction technique with parallel operation system is proposed to remove excessive current in touch screen application. The proposed current subtraction remove the current which go into the input node of charge amplifier. The value of subtraction current is same with current when touch screen is not touched. As a result, charge amplifier output is only proportional to variation of mutual capacitor, which make dynamic rage is increased. Also, Transmitter (Tx) driving signal and subtraction driving signal are out of phase each other. Thus, noise generated in Tx is cancelled. The proposed IC is implemented in a mixed-mode 0.18-um CMOS process. Overall system is designed for touch screen panel (TSP) with 16 driving lines and 8 sensing lines. 5-V supply voltages are used in the proposed circuits. For multiple Tx driving signal, Walsh codes are used and signal frequency is 300 khz. By using proposed technique, dynamic rage is improved 36 dB.clos

    Instantaneous Power Consuming Level Shifter for Improving Power Conversion Efficiency of Buck Converter

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    An instantaneous power consuming level shifter is presented in this paper to increase the DC converter efficiency. The level shifter is used in a high-side power switch driver to remove the external capacitor which is used in bootstrap technique. The level shifter consumes power only during the transition period. A delay cell is used to turn the level shifter off to reduce the power consumption period. An output voltage detector is added to turn the level shifter off even before the delay time. An asynchronous discontinuous conduction mode buck converter is designed to verify the performance of the level shifter. Simulation results show that the power consumption of the proposed level shifter decreased by 66%, while the converter efficiency increased by the maximum of 9% compared to results obtained for a conventional level shifter. The converter is fabricated using the TSMC 0.18-??m BCD process and it operates within an input range of 2-5 V when the current varies from 400 ??A to 18 mA and delivers an output voltage of 1.8 V

    Dynamic range enhanced readout circuit for a capacitive touch screen panel with current subtraction technique

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    A dynamic range enhanced readout circuit using current subtraction technique is presented for a capacitive touch screen panels. A low-voltage, analog front-end circuit using a high-voltage input signal is implemented. A high voltage (> 10 V) parallel pulse signal is used as the transmitter signal. The receiver system was designed with low voltage (<; 5 V). A current-subtraction circuit (CSC) with a current mirror and switches is proposed to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). SNR is improved by removing excessive current from the touch screen panel. High-voltage parallel signaling method is used to further enhance the dynamic range. Dynamic range was increased by a factor of four and reduced the feedback capacitance from 20 to 5 pF. The proposed IC was implemented in a TSMC 0.18-??m high-voltage CMOS process. The power consumption of the chip is 11.2 mW and the chip size is 2.5 mm ?? 2.5 mm

    Tracking Optimal Efficiency of Magnetic Resonance Wireless Power Transfer System for Biomedical Capsule Endoscopy

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    This paper presents a new method to track the optimal efficiency of a magnetic resonance (MR)-wireless power transfer (WPT) system for biomedical capsule endoscopy. Recently, capsule endoscopy technology has been developed and emerged as an alternative to small bowel endoscopy, gastroscopy, and colonoscopy, all of which cause discomfort to patients because of their relatively large-diameter and flexible cables. However, commercialized capsule endoscopy still suffers from limited battery capacity. This paper presents a theory for tracking the optimal efficiency of an MR-WPT system, along with its experimental verification. An MR-WPT system with a 9-mm-diameter receiver is implemented, which is small enough to fit in the current capsule endoscope. The proposed system improves the efficiency despite variations in the distance, angle, and axial misalignment, with maximum increases of 2.45, 4.69, and 1.48 dB, respectively. Penetrative transfer through biological tissue is demonstrated with a low degradation in efficiency of 0.390 dB. The proposed system was found to have a very low specific absorption rate of 1.74 W/kg, which demonstrated that it is safe to use in the human body.close0

    A Stent based Biomedical Wireless Communication Platform for In-Vivo Glucose Sensing System

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    In this paper, a stent based wireless communication platform for in-vivo biomedical glucose sensing system is introduced. Because the system requires small size and low power consumption, on-off keying (OOK) modulation is adopted. In order to reduce the system size, a self-oscillator is used instead of either a phase locked loop (PLL) or a delay locked loop (DLL)

    Algorithm for improving snr using high voltage and differential manchester code for capacitive touch screen panel

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    An algorithm for a capacitive touch screen panel that can make the sum of the signal into '0' for the use of high voltage is presented. The differential Manchester code is combined with the Walsh-Hadamard code to generate an input coded signal. Owing to the property of the differential Manchester code, the Moore-Penrose pseudoinverse matrix is employed to decode-mutual capacitance from the received signal. As only the variation between the un-touch and touch condition is detected at the receiver, a high-voltage input coded signal is used. Unlike a normal touch system, the decoded sensing capacitance in the proposed algorithm does not have an absolute value. Positive decoded capacitance is the un-touch condition and negative decoded capacitance is the touch condition. The simulated signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the proposed algorithm is 27.9 dB, which is 8.26 dB higher than SNR in not return to zero (NRZ).close0

    Highly improved SNR differential sensing method using parallel operation signaling for touch screen application

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    In this paper, a continuous-time differential type multi-signal parallel driving architecture touch screen sensing circuit for projective capacitive type panel is presented. In order to further enhance the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), a new transmitter (TX) architecture is proposed with parallel signal processing algorithm. In this work, charge amplifiers with built-in band-pass filter are designed that filter out low frequency noise and common-mode noise simultaneously. Conventional approaches in continuous-time operation with band-pass filter suffer from a synchronization problem in the case of multi-signal parallel driving. In this work, a built-in delay calibration circuit is proposed that can align signal timing for TX signal and adjacent receiver (RX) sensing line. This proposed architecture enables multi-signal parallel driving in continuous-time operation for projective capacitive sensing circuits. The proposed work supports 16 ?? 8 mutual capacitive touch screen panel (TSP). TSP load is 12.5 k?? and 40 pF with frame rate of 200 Hz and 58 dB SNR. Power dissipation is 46 mW

    Wireless energy transfer: touch/proximity/hover sensing for large, contoured displays and industrial applications industrial applications

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    This paper presents a new kind of touch sensor that utilizes the concept of wireless energy transfer (WET). A near-field sheet like a waveguide-based WET system was used for this purpose based on its geometric suitability. The approaching target object (human finger bio-impedance) disturbs the overall sheet reactance based on a complex power conservation equation at the resonant frequency. Thus, the drop in the efficiency of the power transfer can be utilized to carry out the task of sensing. The WET sensor was designed to operate at 29 MHZ, with a power transfer efficiency of -3.18 dB. An experimental demonstration was performed by feeding a 10 V peak-to-peak sine wave at the transmitter end and reading a dc output using a full-wave rectifier and multi-meter at the receiver end. The system was designed to achieve a drop of 2.1 V when a touch was registered. The sensor was also designed to operate in the proximity mode. For operation in the proximity mode, the receiver had to be a wave trap cavity. This was achieved by designing the receiver to have a cylindrical wave cavity arrangement. The WET sensor had to be unaffected by the presence of an electric field, and this was demonstrated by carrying out sensing while the sensor was located under an LCD, which has a considerable electric field. It was experimentally demonstrated that the sensor had a linear output in proximity mode. Proposed sensor could be ideal candidate for: touch screen panels, human-robotics interactions and security applications.close1
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