Abstract
ABSTRACTWireless communication using electro-magnetic (EM) fields acts as the backbone for information exchange among wearable devices around the human body. However, for Implanted devices, EM fields incur high amount of absorption in the tissue, while alternative modes of transmission including ultrasound, optical and magnetoelectric methods result in large amount of transduction losses due to conversion of one form of energy to another, thereby increasing the overall end-to-end energy loss. To solve the challenge of wirelesspowering and communication in a brain implant with low end-end channel loss, we present Bi-Phasic Quasistatic Brain Communication (BP-QBC), achieving < 60dB worst-case end-to-end channel loss at a channel length of ~55mm, by using Electro-quasistatic (EQS) Signaling thatavoids transduction losses due to no field-modality conversion. BP-QBC utilizes dipole coupling based signal transmission within the brain tissue using differential excitation in the transmitter (TX) and differential signal pick-up at the receiver (RX), while offering ~41X lower power w.r.t. traditional Galvanic Human Body Communication (G-HBC) at a carrier frequency of 1MHz, by blocking any DC current paths through the brain tissue. Since the electrical signal transfer through the human tissue is electro-quasistatic up to several 10’s of MHz range, BP-QBC allows a scalable (bps-10Mbps) duty-cycled uplink (UL) from the implant to an external wearable. The power consumption in the BP-QBC TX is only 0.52 μW at 1Mbps (with 1% duty cycling), which is within the range of harvested power in the downlink (DL) from a wearable hub to an implant through the EQS brain channel, with externally applied electric currents < 1/5th of ICNIRP safety limits. Furthermore, BP-QBCeliminates the need for sub-cranial interrogators/repeaters, as it offers better signal strength due to no field transduction. Such low end-to-end channel loss with high data rates enabled by a completely new modality of brain communication and powering has deep societal and scientific impact in the fields of neurobiological research, brain-machine interfaces, electroceuticals and connected healthcare.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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