Title :
An Ultra-Linear Piezo-Floating-Gate Strain-Gauge for Self-Powered Measurement of Quasi-Static-Strain
Author :
Sarkar, Pradyut ; Chenling Huang ; Chakrabartty, Shantanu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Michigan State Univ., East Lansing, MI, USA
Abstract :
In this paper we describe a self-powered sensor that can be used for in-vivo measurement of the quasi-static-strain and also for in-vivo measurement of the L1 norm of the strain signal. At the core of the proposed design is a linear floating-gate injector that can achieve more than 13 bits of precision in sensing, signal integration and non-volatile storage. The injectors are self-powered by the piezoelectric transducers that convert mechanical energy from strain-variations into electrical energy. A differential injector topology is used to measure the quasi-static strain by integrating the difference between the L1 norm of the piezoelectric signal generated during the positive and negative strain-cycles. The linear floating-gate injectors are integrated with charge-pumps, digital calibration circuits and digital programming circuits to form a system-on-chip solution that can interface with a standard bio-telemetry platform. We demonstrate the proof-of-concept self-powered measurement of quasi-static strain and L1 norm of the strain signal using sensor prototypes fabricated in a 0.5- μm standard CMOS process and validated using a bench-top biomechanical test setup.
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; biomechanics; biomedical electronics; biomedical measurement; biomedical telemetry; biomedical transducers; calibration; charge pump circuits; piezoelectric transducers; strain gauges; strain measurement; system-on-chip; CMOS; bench-top biomechanical test setup; biotelemetry platform; convert mechanical energy; differential injector topology; digital calibration circuits; digital programming circuits; electrical energy; in-vivo measurement; linear floating-gate injector; nonvolatile storage; piezoelectric transducers; quasistatic-strain; self-powered measurement; self-powered sensor; signal integration; strain signal; system-on-chip solution; ultralinear piezofloating-gate strain-gauge; Biomedical measurements; Integrated circuit modeling; Logic gates; Piezoelectric transducers; Strain; Strain measurement; Biomechanics; floating-gate transistor; hot-electron injection; piezoelectricity; quasi-static strain; self-powered sensing; strain-gauge; structural health monitoring; Biomechanical Phenomena; Humans; Monitoring, Physiologic; Oscillometry; Stress, Mechanical; Time Factors; Transducers;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2012.2220764