Planar Elliptical Inductor Design for Wireless Implantable Medical Devices
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Published:2023-01-23
Issue:2
Volume:10
Page:151
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ISSN:2306-5354
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Container-title:Bioengineering
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Bioengineering
Author:
Farooq Muhammad1ORCID, Amin Bilal12, Elahi Adnan2ORCID, Wijns William1, Shahzad Atif13ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Smart Sensors Lab, School of Medicine, University of Galway, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland 2. Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of Galway, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland 3. Centre for Systems Modeling and Quantitative Biomedicine, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK
Abstract
Wireless implantable medical devices (WIMDs) have seen unprecedented progress in the past three decades. WIMDs help clinicians in better-understanding diseases and enhance medical treatment by allowing for remote data collection and delivering tailored patient care. The wireless connectivity range between the external reader and the implanted device is considered one of the key design parameters in WIMD technology. One of the common modes of communication in battery-free WIMDs is inductive coupling, where the power and data between the reader and the implanted device are transmitted via magnetically coupled inductors. The design and shape of these inductors depend on the requirements of the application. Several studies have reported models of standard planar inductors such as circular, square, hexagonal, and octagonal in medical applications. However, for applications, constrained by narrow implantable locations, elliptical planar inductors may perform better than standard-shaped planar inductors. The aim of this study is to develop a numerical model for elliptical inductors. This model allows for the calculation of the inductance of the elliptical planar inductor and its parasitic components, which are key design parameters for the development of WIMDs powered by inductive coupling. An area transformation technique is used to transform and derive elliptical inductor formulas from standard circular inductor formulas. The proposed model is validated for various combinations of the number of turns, trace width, trace separation, and different inner and outer diameters of the elliptical planar inductor. For a thorough experimental validation of the proposed numerical model, more than 75 elliptical planar inductors were fabricated, measured, and compared with the numerical output of the proposed model. The mean error between the measured inductor parameters and numerical estimates using the proposed model is <5%, with a standard deviation of <3.18%. The proposed model provides an accurate analytical method for estimating and optimizing elliptical planar inductor parameters using a combination of current sheet expression and area transformation techniques. An elliptical planar inductor integrated with a sensing element can be used as a wireless implant to monitor the physiological signal from narrow implantation sites.
Funder
Science Foundation Ireland Government of Ireland Disruptive Technology Innovation Fund University of Birmingham Dynamic Investment Fund
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