학술논문

A Wireless FSCV Monitoring IC With Analog Background Subtraction and UWB Telemetry
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems IEEE Trans. Biomed. Circuits Syst. Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on. 10(2):289-299 Apr, 2016
Subject
Bioengineering
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Power capacitors
Wireless communication
Wireless sensor networks
Quantization (signal)
Monitoring
Telemetry
Dynamic range
Analog background subtraction
carbon-fiber microelectrode
dopamine
fast-scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV)
flow-injection analysis
impulse radio
neurochemical monitoring
ultra-wideband (UWB) telemetry
wireless integrated circuit (IC)
Language
ISSN
1932-4545
1940-9990
Abstract
A 30-$\mu {\rm W}$ wireless fast-scan cyclic voltammetry monitoring integrated circuit for ultra-wideband (UWB) transmission of dopamine release events in freely-behaving small animals is presented. On-chip integration of analog background subtraction and UWB telemetry yields a 32-fold increase in resolution versus standard Nyquist-rate conversion alone, near a four-fold decrease in the volume of uplink data versus single-bit, third-order, delta-sigma modulation, and more than a 20-fold reduction in transmit power versus narrowband transmission for low data rates. The 1.5-${\rm mm}^{2}$ chip, which was fabricated in 65-nm CMOS technology, consists of a low-noise potentiostat frontend, a two-step analog-to-digital converter (ADC), and an impulse-radio UWB transmitter (TX). The duty-cycled frontend and ADC/UWB-TX blocks draw 4 $\mu {\rm A}$ and 15 $\mu {\rm A}$ from 3-V and 1.2-V supplies, respectively. The chip achieves an input-referred current noise of 92 ${\rm pA}_{\rm rms}$ and an input current range of $\pm {430}~{\rm nA}$ at a conversion rate of 10 kHz. The packaged device operates from a 3-V coin-cell battery, measures 4.7 $\,\times\,$1.9 ${\rm cm}^{2}$, weighs 4.3 g (including the battery and antenna), and can be carried by small animals. The system was validated by wirelessly recording flow-injection of dopamine with concentrations in the range of 250 nM to 1 $\mu {\rm M}$ with a carbon-fiber microelectrode (CFM) using 300-V/s FSCV.