Author_Institution :
Dept. of Elec. Eng., Ecole Polytech. de Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada
Abstract :
In order to investigate new neurostimulation strategies for micturition recovery in spinal cord injured patients, custom implantable stimulators are required to carry-on chronic animal experiments. However, higher integration of the neurostimulator becomes increasingly necessary for miniaturization purposes, power consumption reduction, and for increasing the number of stimulation channels. As a first step towards total integration, we present in this paper the design of a highly-integrated neurostimulator that can be assembled on a 21-mm diameter printed circuit board. The prototype is based on three custom integrated circuits fabricated in High-Voltage (HV) CMOS technology, and a low-power small-scale commercially available FPGA. Using a step-down approach where the inductive voltage is left free up to 20 V, the inductive power and data recovery front-end is fully integrated. In particular, the front-end includes a bridge rectifier, a 20-V voltage limiter, an adjustable series regulator (5 to 12 V), a switched-capacitor step-down DC/DC converter (1:3, 1:2, or 2:3 ratio), as well as data recovery. Measurements show that the DC/DC converter achieves more than 86% power efficiency while providing around 3.9-V from a 12-V input at 1-mA load, 1:3 conversion ratio, and 50-kHz switching frequency. With such efficiency, the proposed step-down inductive power recovery topology is more advantageous than its conventional step-up counterpart. Experimental results confirm good overall functionality of the system.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; neurophysiology; printed circuits; prosthetics; adjustable series regulator; bridge rectifier; chronic animal experiments; data recovery; fully integrated neurostimulator; high voltage CMOS technology; inductive power recovery front end; micturition recovery; miniaturization; neurostimulation strategy; power consumption reduction; printed circuit board; spinal cord injured patients; step down approach; switched capacitor step down DC/DC converter; voltage limiter; CMOS integrated circuits; Capacitors; Clocks; Field programmable gate arrays; Logic gates; Transistors; Voltage control; Complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits; data demodulation and decoding; high-voltage techniques; implantable biomedical devices; inductive power transmission; rectifiers; switched-capacitor DC-DC converters; voltage limiters; Animals; Biomedical Engineering; Computers; Dogs; Electric Power Supplies; Electronics; Electronics, Medical; Equipment Design; Humans; Implantable Neurostimulators; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Spinal Cord Injuries; Urethra; Urination; Wireless Technology;