Abstract

Medical implants are required to be minimized in size to alleviate surgical pains. Battery and antenna are often the main bottlenecks in system miniaturization. Wireless power transfer (WPT) is a possible way to minimize or eliminate the battery. Medical implants with WPT often use backscattering for data communication due to its low power consumption and low hardware cost. However, the conventional backscattering approach with WPT requires a large implanted antenna to ensure a relatively high efficiency and enough signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for demodulation. In this work, we propose a current-switching technique for intra-body communication to achieve a high SNR and data rate with a pair of small implanted electrodes. Instead of the conventional electric-field based WPT and communication, a current loop is configured in the body tissue for WPT, where a new passive-communication scheme is implemented at the same time. A prototype is implemented to validate the proposed technique, in which the implanted electrodes are designed to be as small as 200 μm × 200 μm, located 13 mm deep in the tissue. The system achieves a communication rate of 10 Mbps with a bit error rate (BER) of 8.4 ×10-4 over the 406 MHz MedRadio band, while the signal-to-blocker ratio and SNR are measured to be -35.7 dB and 12.4dB, respectively.

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