A Trimodal Wireless Implantable Neural Interface System-on-Chip

A wireless and battery-less trimodal neural interface system-on-chip (SoC), capable of 16-ch neural recording, 8-ch electrical stimulation, and 16-ch optical stimulation, all integrated on a 5 ×  3 mm2 chip fabricated in 0.35-μm standard CMOS process. The trimodal SoC is designed to be inductively powered and communicated. The downlink data telemetry utilizes on–off keying pulse-position modulation (OOK-PPM) of the power carrier to deliver configuration and control commands at 50 kbps. The analog front-end (AFE) provides adjustable mid-band gain of 55–70 dB, low/high cut-off frequencies of 1–100 Hz/10 kHz, and input-referred noise of 3.46 μVrms within 1 Hz-50 kHz band. AFE outputs of every two-channel are digitized by a 50 kS/s 10-bit SAR-ADC, and multiplexed together to form a 6.78 Mbps data stream to be sent out by OOK modulating a 434 MHz RF carrier through a power amplifier (PA) and 6 cm monopole antenna, which form the uplink data telemetry. Optical stimulation has a switched-capacitor based stimulation (SCS) architecture, which can sequentially charge four storage capacitor banks up to 4 V and discharge them in selected μLEDs at instantaneous current levels of up to 24.8 mA on demand. Electrical stimulation is supported by four independently driven stimulating sites at 5-bit controllable current levels in ±(25–775)�...
Source: IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems - Category: Biomedical Engineering Source Type: research