DocumentCode :
2864721
Title :
A parallel-trace high-Q planar spiral coil for biomedical implants
Author :
Jiang, Hao ; Zhou, Shiyu ; Lan, Di ; Zhang, Junmin ; Shahnasser, Hamid ; Goldman, Ken ; Roy, Shuvo
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Eng., San Francisco State Univ., San Francisco, CA, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
17-22 June 2012
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
3
Abstract :
High-Q inductive coils are essential components in biomedical implants for efficient wireless charging and effective wireless sensing. The planar spiral coil (PSC) that can be easily optimized and reliably fabricated by lithographic tools is a preferred candidate. To support the inductive coupling at MHz range, the size of PSCs used in implants is much larger than those used in wireless communication circuits. Therefore, to achieve high Q, it is imperative to reduce the metal trace´s unit-length-resistance. In this paper, multiple parallel-connected metal traces, instead of a conventional single trace, have been employed to reduce the unit-length-resistance by mitigating the skin effect. Although the approach was used to make stranded wires for mega-watts transmission systems, it has been used to design PSCs for the first time. The parallel-trace PSC exhibits 38%~53% improvements in Q when it resonates with a capacitor at ~10 MHz. Measurement results also indicate that there is ~10% inductance reduction in the parallel-trace PSC compared to the single-trace PSC of the same design. Measurement results also indicate that, in a parallel-trace PSC, the length difference between the parallel-connected, side-by-side traces when they are winded into a coil, and the dielectric environment difference when they are placed in different layers, can be neglected when the operating frequency is less than the PSCs self-resonating frequency. Utilizing widely-available planar fabrication technologies, the parallel-trace PSC can be widely adopted in biomedical implants.
Keywords :
capacitors; coils; dielectric materials; electric resistance; lithography; prosthetics; radiofrequency power transmission; skin effect; PSC self-resonating frequency; biomedical implants; dielectric environment; high-Q inductive coils; inductance reduction; inductive coupling; lithographic tools fabrication; mega-watts transmission systems; metal trace unit-length-resistance; multiple parallel-connected metal traces; parallel-connected traces; parallel-trace PSC; parallel-trace high-Q planar spiral coil; side-by-side traces; single-trace PSC; skin effect mitigation; unit-length-resistance reduction; wireless charging; wireless communication circuits; wireless sensing; Coils; Implants; Inductance; Metals; Resonant frequency; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; biomedical implant; planar spiral coil; wireless power transfer; wireless sensing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microwave Symposium Digest (MTT), 2012 IEEE MTT-S International
Conference_Location :
Montreal, QC
ISSN :
0149-645X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1085-7
Electronic_ISBN :
0149-645X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MWSYM.2012.6259488
Filename :
6259488
Link To Document :
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