JOURNAL ARTICLE

A wireless batteryless in vivo EKG and core body temperature sensing microsystem with 60 Hz suppression technique for untethered genetically engineered mice real-time monitoring

Abstract

A wireless, batteryless, and implantable EKG and core body temperature sensing microsystem with adaptive RF powering for untethered genetically engineered mice real-time monitoring is designed, implemented, and in vivo characterized. A packaged microsystem, exhibiting a total size of 9 mm x 7 mm x 3 mm with a weight of 400 mg including a pair of stainless-steel EKG electrodes, is implanted in a mouse abdomen for real-time monitoring. A low power 2 mm x 2 mm ASIC, consisting of an EKG amplifier, a proportional-to-absolute-temperature (PTAT)-based temperature sensor, an RF power sensing circuit, an RF-DC power converter, an 8-bit ADC, digital control circuitry, and a 433 MHz FSK transmitter, is powered by an adaptively controlled external RF energy source at 4 MHz to ensure a stable 2V supply with 156microA current driving capability for the overall microsystem. An electrical model for analyzing 60 Hz interference based on 2-electrode and 3-electrode configurations is proposed and compared with in vivo evaluation results. Due to the small laboratory animal chest area, a 60 Hz suppression technique by employing input termination resistors is chosen for two-EKG-electrode implant configuration.

Keywords:
Microsystem Resistor Materials science Electrical engineering Amplifier Electronic engineering CMOS Optoelectronics Voltage Engineering

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0.64
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Citation History

Topics

Wireless Power Transfer Systems
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Analog and Mixed-Signal Circuit Design
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Radio Frequency Integrated Circuit Design
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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