Abstract

This paper presents a methodology of monitoring respiration pattern using piezoelectric transducer incorporating CMOS integrated circuits for signal processing and data transmission. As a proof of concept, the system has been tested by placing electrodes on human chest using adhesive hydrogel to detect the pulsatile vibration due to respiration. The system can be used either as a wearable device itself or alternatively can be attached to a jacket or a chest belt. The front-end transducer is a piezoelectric material-based sensor, which is comprised of a ferroelectric polymer named polyvinylidene-fluoride (PVDF). PVDF is also biocompatible, which makes the sensor suitable to be used as a wearable device. The charge produced by the sensor is converted to a proportional voltage signal with the help of a charge amplifier designed in a standard 130-nm CMOS process with eight metal and one poly layer. The analog voltage signal acquired from the charge amplifier is then converted into a digital signal using a reconfigurable pipelined analog-to-digital converter for ease of transmission. An impulse-radio ultra-wideband transmitter operating in the frequency range of 3.1–5 GHz is designed for wireless transmission of the data. The smaller footprint, lighter weight, wireless telemetry, and low-cost material along with the low-power integrated CMOS circuitry for signal processing and data transmission make the proposed system an attractive choice for stable respiration monitoring system.

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