4.7 Article

A Power-Efficient Bridge Readout Circuit for Implantable, Wearable, and IoT Applications

Journal

IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 17, Pages 9955-9962

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSEN.2020.2992476

Keywords

Bridge circuits; Power demand; Biomedical monitoring; Monitoring; Wearable sensors; Bridge-to-digital conversion; pseudo-pseudo differential; power supply rejection ratio; pressure sensing; Wheatstone bridge

Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health (NIH NINDS) [R21 NS108391]

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A power-efficient bridge-to-digital sensing interface is proposed, which also offers immunity against power supply noise. The interface utilizes duty-cycling to reduce the static power consumption of resistive bridge sensors, which are commonly used in implantable, wearable, and internet of things (IoT) applications, such as intracranial pressure (ICP) sensing and blood pressure (BP) monitoring. The proposed interface uses a revised version of the pseudo-pseudo differential (PPD) topology with the ping-pong technique to reduce the complexity of traditional fully-differential counterparts. A proof-of-concept prototype has been fabricated in 0.35-mu m CMOS and occupies an active area of 0.48 mm(2). It achieves 9.13 effective number of bits (ENOB) at 3.72 kHz sampling rate and improvement of more than 50 dB in the power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) by employing the ping-pong technique. It reduces the power consumption of a 5-k Omega Wheatstone bridge by 99.6% compared to a traditional interface, down to 2.53 mu w at 1.8 V supply. The functionality of the system has also been demonstrated in an experimental setup in conjunction with an embedded resistive bridge pressure sensor.

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