Title :
A mm-Sized Wirelessly Powered and Remotely Controlled Locomotive Implant
Author :
Pivonka, Daniel ; Yakovlev, Alex ; Poon, Ada S. Y. ; Meng, Tong
Author_Institution :
Electr. Eng. Dept., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract :
A wirelessly powered and controlled implantable device capable of locomotion in a fluid medium is presented. Two scalable low-power propulsion methods are described that achieve roughly an order of magnitude better performance than existing methods in terms of thrust conversion efficiency. The wireless prototype occupies 0.6 mm × 1 mm in 65 nm CMOS with an external 2 mm × 2 mm receive antenna. The IC consists of a matching network, a rectifier, a bandgap reference, a regulator, a demodulator, a digital controller, and high-current drivers that interface directly with the propulsion system. It receives 500 μW from a 2 W 1.86 GHz power signal at a distance of 5 cm. Asynchronous pulse-width modulation on the carrier allows for data rates from 2.5-25 Mbps with energy efficiency of 0.5 pJ/b at 10 Mbps. The received data configures the propulsion system drivers, which are capable of driving up to 2 mA at 0.2 V and can achieve speed of 0.53 cm/sec in a 0.06 T magnetic field.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; bioMEMS; controllers; demodulators; power supplies to apparatus; prosthetics; pulse width modulation; rectifiers; CMOS; asynchronous pulse width modulation; bandgap reference; bit rate 2.5 Mbit/s to 25 Mbit/s; current 2 mA; demodulator; digital controller; distance 5 cm; external receive antenna; fluid medium; frequency 1.86 GHz; high current drivers; magnetic flux density 0.06 T; matching network; mm-sized locomotive implant; power 2 W; power 500 muW; propulsion system drivers; rectifier; regulator; remotely controlled locomotive implant; scalable low power propulsion methods; size 0.6 mm; size 1 mm; size 2 mm; size 65 nm; velocity 0.53 cm/s; voltage 0.2 V; wirelessly powered locomotive implant; Biomedical telemetry; Drug delivery; Implantable biomedical devices; Magnetohydrodynamics; Wireless communication; Biomedical telemetry; drug delivery; implantable biomedical devices; low power; micro-scale fluid propulsion; noninvasive; wireless health monitoring; wireless powering; Biomedical Engineering; Drug Delivery Systems; Electric Power Supplies; Equipment Design; Humans; Hydrodynamics; Magnetic Phenomena; Motion; Prostheses and Implants; Telemetry; Wireless Technology;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2012.2232665