3.8 Proceedings Paper

A 4-channel Fully Integrated Ultrasound Imaging Front-End Transceiver for 1-D PMUT Arrays

Publisher

IEEE
DOI: 10.1109/IUS54386.2022.9958896

Keywords

PMUT; Ultrasonic MEMS; Analog Front-End Ultrasonic Transceiver; Low-Noise Amplifier; Medical Ultrasound Imaging; Phased Array; Acoustic Characterization

Funding

  1. ECSEL Joint Undertaking [H2020-ECSEL-2019-IA-876190]

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This paper reports on the development of a fully integrated 4-channel analog front-end transceiver designed for 1-D PMUT arrays. The electrical and acoustic characteristics of the transceiver are described based on chip prototypes and experiments.
This paper reports on the development of a fully integrated 4-channel analog front-end (AFE) transceiver designed for 1-D PMUT arrays operating in the 1-10 MHz range. The single channel consisted of a transceiver featuring a transmit (TX) pulser capable of delivering 100 Vpk-pk, 3-level pulses with independently programmable delay and duration followed by a T/R switch, and a receive (RX) chain comprising a programmable gain Low Noise voltage Amplifier (LNA) and a Buffer. Chip prototypes were fabricated using a 165nm BCD-SOI technology. Electrical and acoustic tests of the AFE were carried out in conjunction with a 2.5MHz, 80% fractional bandwidth, 64-element 1-D PMUT array fabricated using a sol-gel PZT thin film-based technology. Hydrophone and pulse-echo experiments were carried out in a water tank setup using a custom designed test board. Electrical characterization of the LNA reported a 0.65-40 MHz -3dB band, an equivalent input noise voltage density of 13 nV/root Hz at 3 MHz at the maximum gain, and a power consumption of 5.4 mW/ch. The large signal TX pressure response of 4 adjacent PMUT array elements driven by 20Vpk, 3-cycle, 2MHz pulses was estimated at the transducer surface, resulting in a peak negative pressure of 543 kPa with a second harmonic distortion of-30 dB. Small signal TX pressure and pulse-echo impulse responses were processed to extract the transfer function of the RX chain, which is characterized by a peak sensitivity of 55 mV/kPa at 2.3 MHz.

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