Title :
A Low-Power 32-Channel Digitally Programmable Neural Recording Integrated Circuit
Author :
Wattanapanitch, W. ; Sarpeshkar, R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
We report the design of an ultra-low-power 32-channel neural-recording integrated circuit (chip) in a 0.18 μ m CMOS technology. The chip consists of eight neural recording modules where each module contains four neural amplifiers, an analog multiplexer, an A/D converter, and a serial programming interface. Each amplifier can be programmed to record either spikes or LFPs with a programmable gain from 49-66 dB. To minimize the total power consumption, an adaptive-biasing scheme is utilized to adjust each amplifier´s input-referred noise to suit the background noise at the recording site. The amplifier´s input-referred noise can be adjusted from 11.2 μVrms (total power of 5.4 μW) down to 5.4 μVrms (total power of 20 μW) in the spike-recording setting. The ADC in each recording module digitizes the a.c. signal input to each amplifier at 8-bit precision with a sampling rate of 31.25 kS/s per channel, with an average power consumption of 483 nW per channel, and, because of a.c. coupling, allows d.c. operation over a wide dynamic range. It achieves an ENOB of 7.65, resulting in a net efficiency of 77 fJ/State, making it one of the most energy-efficient designs for neural recording applications. The presented chip was successfully tested in an in vivo wireless recording experiment from a behaving primate with an average power dissipation per channel of 10.1 μ W. The neural amplifier and the ADC occupy areas of 0.03 mm2 and 0.02 mm2 respectively, making our design simultaneously area efficient and power efficient, thus enabling scaling to high channel-count systems.
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; CMOS digital integrated circuits; amplifiers; analogue-digital conversion; biomedical electronics; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit noise; low-power electronics; neural chips; neurophysiology; programmable circuits; A/D converter; ADC; CMOS technology; ENOB; a.c. coupling; adaptive-biasing scheme; analog multiplexer; background noise; d.c. operation; high channel-count system; in-vivo wireless recording experiment; low-power 32-channel digitally programmable neural recording integrated circuit; neural amplifiers; power consumption; power dissipation; programmable gain; sampling rate; serial programming interface; size 0.18 mum; spike-recording setting; ultralow-power 32-channel neural-recording integrated circuit; Analog-digital conversion; Brain computer interfaces; CMOS technology; Energy efficiency; Integrated circuits; Low power electronics; Analog-to-digital converters; brain-machine interfaces; digitally programmable; energy efficient; low power; neural amplifiers; neural-recording systems;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2011.2163404