A Capacitive Pressure Sensor Interface IC with Wireless Power and Data Transfer

This paper presents a capacitive pressure sensor interface circuit design in 180 nm XH018 CMOS technology for an implantable capacitive pressure sensor, which has a wireless power supply and wireless data transfer function. It integrates full-bridge rectifiers, shorting control switches, low-dropout...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chaoping Zhang, Robert Gallichan, David M. Budgett, Daniel McCormick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Micromachines
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/11/10/897
Description
Summary:This paper presents a capacitive pressure sensor interface circuit design in 180 nm XH018 CMOS technology for an implantable capacitive pressure sensor, which has a wireless power supply and wireless data transfer function. It integrates full-bridge rectifiers, shorting control switches, low-dropout regulators, bandgap references, analog front end, single slope analog to digital converter (ADC), I2C, and an RC oscillator. The low-dropout regulators regulate the wireless power supply coming from the rectifier and provide a stable and accurate 1.8 V DC voltage to other blocks. The capacitance of the pressure sensor is sampled to a discrete voltage by the analog front end. The single slope ADC converts the discrete voltage into 11 bits of digital data, which is then converted into 1 kbps serial data out by the I2C block. The “1” of serial data is modulated to a 500 kHz digital signal that is used to control the shorting switch for wireless data transfer via inductive back scatter. This capacitive pressure sensor interface IC has a resolution of 0.98 mmHg (1.4 fF), average total power consumption of 7.8 mW, and ±3.2% accuracy at the worst case under a −20 to 80 °C temperature range, which improves to ±0.86% when operated between 20 and 60 °C.
ISSN:2072-666X