4.7 Article

Adaptively Clock-Boosted Auto-Ranging Neural-Interface for Emerging Neuromodulation Applications

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 1138-1152

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TBCAS.2022.3223988

Keywords

Analog-to-digital converter; brain implant; brain-machine interface; brain-computer interface; chopping; closed-loop; DC-coupled; delta modulator; input impedance; opamp-less; radix-2 auto-ranging; spectrum equalization; temporally interfering stimulation; neural-ADC; non-invasive neuromodulation; opamp-less; stimulation artifact

Funding

  1. Canadian Microelectronics Corporation (CMC)
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

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This paper presents a low-power bidirectional 64-channel CMOS neural-ADC that is immune to artifacts such as those in the TIS techniques or conventional biphasic stimulation. The ADC is able to maintain high input impedance and recover quickly within 100 microseconds. In vivo recordings from anesthetized mice demonstrate the unique capabilities of the presented architecture in resolving local field potentials.
Responsive deep brain stimulation (DBS) requires recruiting deep brain structures without affecting the superficial neuronal population. Neurosurgeons widely use implanted electrodes, which are highly localized but invasive, to stimulate the deep brain. Temporally interfering stimulation (TIS) excites the deep brain non-invasively. This neuromodulation technique utilizes two high-frequency sinusoidal electric fields that do not recruit superficial neural structures but have a small frequency differential. The small differential causes a low-frequency interference envelope that stimulates deep regions and is steerable by changing the intensity of the electric fields without physically moving the electrodes. Using TIS as a non-invasive DBS method generates high-frequency stimulation artifacts at recording sites, which may saturate a conventional recording front-end. This paper presents a low-power bidirectional 64-channel CMOS neural-ADC that is immune to artifacts such as those in the TIS techniques or conventional biphasic stimulation. The presented DC-coupled chopped analog front-end leverages delta-spectrum shaping to remove electrode DC offset voltage and maintain the input impedance higher than 250 MO, which is sufficient for interfacing with non-invasive scalp electrodes. The AFE operates on the input signal difference to detect large and rapid stimulation artifacts. It incorporates both exponential tracking and boosted-rate sampling to recover within 100 mu s. Upon recovery, the neural-ADC range and speed are reduced to achieve noise and power efficiency factors of 2.98 and 10.6, respectively. In vivo recordings from anesthetized mice demonstrate the unique capabilities of the presented architecture in resolving local field potentials from the surface and epidural electrodes.

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