A Highly Energy-Efficient Body-Coupled Transceiver Employing a Power-on-Demand Amplifier

Wearable body sensor nodes require massive data transmission under limited energy. However, it suffers from drastically varying channel loss, which limits its energy efficiency in practical scenarios. This paper presents a power-driven body-channel transceiver (TRX), whose power consumption can be a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tao He, Yabin Zheng, Xu Liang, Jiamin Li, Longyang Lin, Wenfeng Zhao, Yongfu Li, Jian Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2023-01-01
Series:Cyborg and Bionic Systems
Online Access:https://spj.science.org/doi/10.34133/cbsystems.0030
Description
Summary:Wearable body sensor nodes require massive data transmission under limited energy. However, it suffers from drastically varying channel loss, which limits its energy efficiency in practical scenarios. This paper presents a power-driven body-channel transceiver (TRX), whose power consumption can be adaptively tuned against varying channel loss. An out-band programmable gain amplifier (PGA) is proposed to save power and generate a quasi-linear correlation between PGA gain and power. By using the quasi-linear gain-power relationship, we propose an auto gain/power control technique to realize on-demand power consumption. In addition, a differential balanced transmitter is designed to eliminate base-band harmonics in on-off keying modulation and increase the power delivered by the transmitter (TX). The TX and receiver (RX) of the prototype were integrated into 1 chip and fabricated in a 55-nm complementary metal oxide semiconductor process. During the measurement, 2 chips were configured as TX and RX, respectively. Both the TX and the RX were wearable, powered by lithium batteries, and attached to the subject’s hands. The prototype achieved a 5.25-Mbps data rate with 16-pJ/bit energy efficiency at a 1.5-m straight-line ground path distance. Furthermore, the proposed TRX maintained stable communication within a 1.5-m distance, while dynamically reducing power consumption.
ISSN:2692-7632