Paper
1 June 2015 A low power on-chip class-E power amplifier for remotely powered implantable sensor systems
Kerim Ture, Enver G. Kilinc, Catherine Dehollain
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9518, Bio-MEMS and Medical Microdevices II; 951805 (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2178632
Event: SPIE Microtechnologies, 2015, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract
This paper presents a low power fully integrated class-E power amplifier and its integration with remotely powered sensor system. The class-E power amplifier is suitable solution for low-power applications due to its high power efficiency. However, the required high inductance values which make the on-chip integration of the power amplifier difficult. The designed power amplifier is fully integrated in the remotely powered sensor system and fabricated in 0.18 μm CMOS process. The power is transferred to the implantable sensor system at 13.56 MHz by using an inductively coupled remote powering link. The induced AC voltage on the implant coil is converted into a DC voltage by a passive full-wave rectifier. A voltage regulator is used to suppress the ripples and create a clean and stable 1.8 V supply voltage for the sensor and communication blocks. The data collected from the sensors is transmitted by on-off keying modulated low-power transmitter at 1.2 GHz frequency. The transmitter is composed of a LC tank oscillator and a fully on-chip class-E power amplifier. An additional output network is used for the power amplifier which makes the integration of the power amplifier fully on-chip. The integrated power amplifier with 0.2 V supply voltage has a drain efficiency of 31.5% at -10 dBm output power for 50 Ω load. The measurement results verify the functionality of the power amplifier and the remotely powered implantable sensor system. The data communication is also verified by using a commercial 50 Ω chip antenna and has 600 kbps data rate at 1 m communication distance.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kerim Ture, Enver G. Kilinc, and Catherine Dehollain "A low power on-chip class-E power amplifier for remotely powered implantable sensor systems", Proc. SPIE 9518, Bio-MEMS and Medical Microdevices II, 951805 (1 June 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2178632
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Amplifiers

Remote sensing

Data communications

Oscillators

Antennas

Transmitters

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