Title :
A Low-Power CMOS Front-End for Photoplethysmographic Signal Acquisition With Robust DC Photocurrent Rejection
Author :
Wong, A.K.Y. ; Kong-Pang Pun ; Yuan-Ting Zhang ; Ka Nang Leung
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Toronto Univ., Toronto, ON
Abstract :
A micro-power CMOS front-end, consisting of a transimpedance amplifier (TIA) and an ultralow cutoff frequency lowpass filter for the acquisition of photoplethysmographic signal (PPG) is presented. Robust DC photocurrent rejection for the pulsed signal source is achieved through a sample-and-hold stage in the feed-forward signal path and an error amplifier in the feedback path. Ultra-low cutoff frequency of the filter is achieved with a proposed technique that incorporates a pair of current-steering transistors that increases the effective filter capacitance. The design was realized in a 0.35-mum CMOS technology. It consumes 600 muW at 2.5 V, rejects DC photocurrent ranged from 100 nA to 53.6 muA, and achieves lower-band and upper-band - 3-dB cutoff frequencies of 0.46 and 2.8 Hz, respectively.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; bio-optics; biomedical electronics; feedback amplifiers; feedforward; low-pass filters; medical signal detection; medical signal processing; plethysmography; sample and hold circuits; current 100 nA to 53.6 muA; current-steering transistors; effective filter capacitance; error amplifier; feed-forward signal path; frequency 0.46 Hz; frequency 2.8 Hz; low-power CMOS front-end; micropower CMOS front-end; photoplethysmographic signal acquisition; power 600 muW; pulsed signal source; robust DC photocurrent rejection; sample-and-hold stage; size 0.35 mum; ultra-low cutoff frequency; ultralow cutoff frequency lowpass filter; voltage 2.5 V; Biomedical engineering; Capacitance; Cutoff frequency; Energy consumption; Feedback; Filters; Light emitting diodes; Photoconductivity; Pulse amplifiers; Robustness; Current-steering; dc photocurrent rejection; photoplethysmogram; pulsed light source; ultralow cutoff frequency filter;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2008.2003429