Title :
An Inductively Powered Scalable 32-Channel Wireless Neural Recording System-on-a-Chip for Neuroscience Applications
Author :
Lee, Seung Bae ; Lee, Hyung-Min ; Kiani, Mehdi ; Jow, Uei-Ming ; Ghovanloo, Maysam
Author_Institution :
GT-Bionics Lab., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract :
We present an inductively powered 32-channel wireless integrated neural recording (WINeR) system-on-a-chip (SoC) to be ultimately used for one or more small freely behaving animals. The inductive powering is intended to relieve the animals from carrying bulky batteries used in other wireless systems, and enables long recording sessions. The WINeR system uses time-division multiplexing along with a novel power scheduling method that reduces the current in unused low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) to cut the total SoC power consumption. In addition, an on-chip high-efficiency active rectifier with optimized coils help improve the overall system power efficiency, which is controlled in a closed loop to supply stable power to the WINeR regardless of the coil displacements. The WINeR SoC has been implemented in a 0.5-μ m standard complementary metal-oxide semiconductor process, measuring 4.9×3.3 mm2 and consuming 5.85 mW at ±1.5 V when 12 out of 32 LNAs are active at any time by power scheduling. Measured input-referred noise for the entire system, including the receiver located at 1.2 m, is 4.95 μVrms in the 1 Hz~10 kHz range when the system is inductively powered with 7-cm separation between aligned coils.
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; biomedical electronics; low noise amplifiers; neurophysiology; prosthetics; rectifiers; system-on-chip; WINeR system; complementary metal-oxide semiconductor process; frequency 1 kHz to 10 kHz; inductive powering; input-referred noise; low-noise amplifiers; on-chip high-efficiency active rectifier; power 5.85 mW; power scheduling method; scalable 32-channel wireless neural recording system; size 0.5 mum; system-on-a-chip; time-division multiplexing; Implantable biomedical devices; Inductive power transmission; Neuroscience; System-on-a-chip; Implantable microelectronic devices; inductive power transmission; neural recording; system-on-a-chip (SoC);
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2010.2078814