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Miniaturized Wirelessly Powered and Controlled Implants for Multisite Stimulation.
Habibagahi, Iman; Jang, Jaeeun; Babakhani, Aydin.
  • Habibagahi I; Department of Electrical Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
  • Jang J; Department of Electrical Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
  • Babakhani A; Department of Electrical Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA.
IEEE Trans Microw Theory Tech ; 71(5): 1911-1922, 2023 May.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38645708
ABSTRACT
This paper presents a miniaturized implant with a diameter of only 14 mm, which houses a novel System on Chip (SoC) enabling two voltage level stimulation of up to 16 implants using a single Tx coil. Each implant can operate at a distance of 80 mm in the air through the inductive resonant link. The SoC consumes only 27 µW static power and enables two channels with stimulation amplitudes of 1.8 V and 3.3 V and timing resolution of 100 µs. The SoC is implemented in the standard 180 nm complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology and has an area of 0.75 mm × 1.6 mm. The SoC comprises an RF rectifier, low drop-out regulator (LDO), error detection block, clock data recovery, finite state machine (FSM), and output stage. Each implant has a PCB-defined passcode, which enables the individual addressability of the implants for synchronized therapies. The implantable device weighs only 80 mg and sizes 20.1 mm3. Tolerance of up to 70° to angular misalignment was measured at a distance of 50 mm. The efficacy of bilateral stimulation was further verified by implanting two devices on two sides of a pig's neck and performing bilateral vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), while monitoring the heart rate.
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