Title :
High-voltage compliant, capacitive-load invariant neural stimulation electronics compatible with standard bulk-CMOS integration
Author :
Pepin, E. ; Micheletti, D. ; Perlmutter, S. ; Rudell, J.C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Abstract :
A neural stimulator architecture is described which can drive biphasic, constant-current waveforms through a wide range of electrode impedances with approximately ±11V compliance, while using a low-voltage, modern bulk-CMOS technology. The design, based on an H-bridge topology, utilizes a regulated “discharge” phase during biphasic delivery to account for “capacitive-looking” electrodes, extending the bipolar on-chip headroom of a CMOS stimulator. Stimulus current is supplied by integrated switched-capacitor, dynamic voltage supplies (0-12V), which operate with closed-loop control. The stimulator topology also uses a single, low-voltage current DAC to regulate the entire biphasic current waveform. The voltage supply block has been fabricated in 65nm standard CMOS. Cadence simulations of the proposed biphasic driver, designed for 250μA maximum current, are given for several “high” impedance electrode models. The efficacy of the proposed integrated electronics in potential neural stimulation applications is demonstrated with a board-level prototype, which has been designed and evaluated in-vivo (rat).
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; biomedical electrodes; electromyography; neurophysiology; CMOS stimulator; H-bridge topology; biphasic current waveform; biphasic delivery; bipolar on-chip headroom; capacitive-load invariant neural stimulation electronics; capacitive-looking electrodes; closed-loop control; constant-current waveforms; discharge phase; dynamic voltage supplies; electrode impedances; high-impedance electrode models; integrated electronics; integrated switched-capacitor; low-voltage current DAC; neural stimulator architecture; potential neural stimulation applications; standard bulk-CMOS integration; CMOS integrated circuits; Capacitors; Discharges (electric); Electrodes; Switches; Voltage control; Voltage measurement; bulk-CMOS; high-voltage; neural stimulation;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems Conference (BioCAS), 2014 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Lausanne
DOI :
10.1109/BioCAS.2014.6981712