Batteryless, Wireless, and Secure SoC for Implantable Strain Sensing
Batteryless, Wireless, and Secure SoC for Implantable Strain Sensing
Blog Article
The past few years have witnessed a growing interest in wireless and batteryless implants, due to their potential in long-term biomedical monitoring of in-body conditions, such as internal organ movements, bladder pressure, and gastrointestinal health.Early proposals for batteryless implants relied on inductive near-field coupling and ultrasound harvesting, which require direct contact between the external power source and the human body.To overcome this near-field challenge, recent research has investigated the use of RF backscatter in wireless micro-implants because of its ability to communicate Sippy Cup with wireless receivers that are placed at a distance outside the body $(sim 0.5$ m), allowing a more seamless user experience.
Unfortunately, existing far-field backscatter designs remain limited in their functionality: they cannot perform biometric sensing or secure data transmission; they also suffer from degraded harvesting efficiency and backscatter range due to the impact of variations in the surrounding tissues.In this article, we present the design of a batteryless, Panels wireless and secure system-on-chip (SoC) implant for in-body strain sensing.The SoC relies on four features: 1) employing a reconfigurable in-body rectenna which can operate across tissues adapting its backscatter bandwidth and center frequency; 2) designing an energy efficient 1.37 mmHg strain sensing front-end with an efficiency of 5.
9 mmHg $cdot $ nJ/conversion; 3) incorporating an AES-GCM security engine to ensure the authenticity and confidentiality of sensed data while sharing the ADC with the sensor interface for an area-efficient random number generation; 4) implementing an over-the-air closed-loop wireless programming scheme to reprogram the RF front-end to adapt for surrounding tissues and the sensor front-end to achieve faster settling times below 2 s.