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  5. A Low-Power, Reconfigurable, Pipelined ADC with Automatic Adaptation for Implantable Bioimpedance Applications
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A Low-Power, Reconfigurable, Pipelined ADC with Automatic Adaptation for Implantable Bioimpedance Applications

Date Issued
December 1, 2014
Author(s)
Randall, Terence Cordell  
Advisor(s)
Syed K. Islam
Additional Advisor(s)
Benjamin J. Blalock
Nicole McFarlane
Jeremy Holleman
Joshua Fu
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/24255
Abstract

Biomedical monitoring systems that observe various physiological parameters or electrochemical reactions typically cannot expect signals with fixed amplitude or frequency as signal properties can vary greatly even among similar biosignals. Furthermore, advancements in biomedical research have resulted in more elaborate biosignal monitoring schemes which allow the continuous acquisition of important patient information. Conventional ADCs with a fixed resolution and sampling rate are not able to adapt to signals with a wide range of variation. As a result, reconfigurable analog-to-digital converters (ADC) have become increasingly more attractive for implantable biosensor systems. These converters are able to change their operable resolution, sampling rate, or both in order convert changing signals with increased power efficiency.


Traditionally, biomedical sensing applications were limited to low frequencies. Therefore, much of the research on ADCs for biomedical applications focused on minimizing power consumption with smaller bias currents resulting in low sampling rates. However, recently bioimpedance monitoring has become more popular because of its healthcare possibilities. Bioimpedance monitoring involves injecting an AC current into a biosample and measuring the corresponding voltage drop. The frequency of the injected current greatly affects the amplitude and phase of the voltage drop as biological tissue is comprised of resistive and capacitive elements. For this reason, a full spectrum of measurements from 100 Hz to 10-100 MHz is required to gain a full understanding of the impedance. For this type of implantable biomedical application, the typical low power, low sampling rate analog-to-digital converter is insufficient. A different optimization of power and performance must be achieved.

Since SAR ADC power consumption scales heavily with sampling rate, the converters that sample fast enough to be attractive for bioimpedance monitoring do not have a figure-of-merit that is comparable to the slower converters. Therefore, an auto-adapting, reconfigurable pipelined analog-to-digital converter is proposed. The converter can operate with either 8 or 10 bits of resolution and with a sampling rate of 0.1 or 20 MS/s. Additionally, the resolution and sampling rate are automatically determined by the converter itself based on the input signal. This way, power efficiency is increased for input signals of varying frequency and amplitude.

Subjects

Pipelined ADC

low-power data conver...

bioimpedance

reconfigurable data c...

Disciplines
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Electrical and Electronics
VLSI and Circuits, Embedded and Hardware Systems
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Electrical Engineering
Embargo Date
January 1, 2011
File(s)
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Terence_Randall_Dissertation_Final.pdf

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1.91 MB

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Adobe PDF

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Thumbnail Image
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Terence_Randall_Dissertation_ski.docx

Size

7.53 MB

Format

Microsoft Word XML

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30e33ec5798d55608f1f0eb3a19e113b

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