Title :
An ultra-low-power programmable analog bionic ear processor
Author :
Sarpeshkar, Rahul ; Salthouse, Christopher ; Sit, Ji-Jon ; Baker, Michael W. ; Zhak, Serhii M. ; Lu, Timothy K -T ; Turicchia, Lorenzo ; Balster, Stephanie
Author_Institution :
Res. Lab. of Electron., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
fDate :
4/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We report a programmable analog bionic ear (cochlear implant) processor in a 1.5-μm BiCMOS technology with a power consumption of 211 μW and 77-dB dynamic range of operation. The 9.58 mm×9.23 mm processor chip runs on a 2.8 V supply and has a power consumption that is lower than state-of-the-art analog-to-digital (A/D)-then-DSP designs by a factor of 25. It is suitable for use in fully implanted cochlear-implant systems of the future which require decades of operation on a 100-mAh rechargeable battery with a finite number of charge-discharge cycles. It may also be used as an ultra-low-power spectrum-analysis front end in portable speech-recognition systems. The power consumption of the processor includes the 100 μW power consumption of a JFET-buffered electret microphone and an associated on-chip microphone front end. An automatic gain control circuit compresses the 77-dB input dynamic range into a narrower internal dynamic range (IDR) of 57 dB at which each of the 16 spectral channels of the processor operate. The output bits of the processor are scanned and reported off chip in a format suitable for continuous-interleaved-sampling stimulation of electrodes. Power-supply-immune biasing circuits ensure robust operation of the processor in the high-RF-noise environment typical of cochlear implant systems.
Keywords :
BiCMOS analogue integrated circuits; biomedical electrodes; ear; gain control; prosthetics; spectral analysis; speech recognition; 1.5 mum; 2.8 V; 211 muW; 57 dB; 77 dB; 9.23 mm; 9.58 mm; BiCMOS technology; JFET-buffered electret microphone; automatic gain control circuit; continuous-interleaved-sampling stimulation; electrodes; fully implanted cochlear implant systems; internal dynamic range; on-chip microphone front end; portable speech-recognition systems; power-supply-immune biasing circuits; ultra-low-power programmable analog bionic ear processor; ultra-low-power spectrum-analysis front end; Batteries; BiCMOS integrated circuits; Cochlear implants; Dynamic range; Ear; Electrets; Electrodes; Energy consumption; Gain control; Microphones; Bionic ear; cochlear implant; hearing aids; low power; spectrum analysis; speech recognition; Algorithms; Bionics; Cochlear Implants; Electric Power Supplies; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Microcomputers; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Sound Spectrography;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2005.844043