A 5-ms Error, 22-μA Photoplethysmography Sensor using Current Integration Circuit and Correlated Double Sampling

This paper presents a low-power Photoplethysmography (PPG) sensing method. The PPG is commonly used in recent wearable devices to detect cardiovascular information including heartbeat. The heartbeat is useful for physical activity and stress monitoring. However, the PPG circuit consumes large power...

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Published inConference proceedings (IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. Conf.) Vol. 2018; pp. 5566 - 5569
Main Authors Watanabe, Kento, Izumi, Shintaro, Yano, Yuji, Kawaguchi, Hiroshi, Yoshimoto, Masahiko
Format Conference Proceeding Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States IEEE 01.07.2018
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ISSN1557-170X
1558-4615
DOI10.1109/EMBC.2018.8513509

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Summary:This paper presents a low-power Photoplethysmography (PPG) sensing method. The PPG is commonly used in recent wearable devices to detect cardiovascular information including heartbeat. The heartbeat is useful for physical activity and stress monitoring. However, the PPG circuit consumes large power because it consists of LED and photodiode. To reduce its power consumption without accuracy degradation, a cooperative design of circuits and algorithms is proposed in this work. A straightforward way to reduce the power is intermittent driving of LED, but there is a disadvantage that the signal is contaminated by a noise while circuit switching. To overcome this problem, we introduce correlated double sampling (CDS) method, which samples an integration circuit output twice with short intervals after the LED turns on and uses the difference of these voltage. Furthermore, an up-conversion method using linear interpolation, and an error correction using autocorrelation are introduced. The proposed PPG sensor, which consists of the LED, the photodiode, the current integration circuit, a CMOS switch, an A/D converter, and an MCU, is prototyped. It is evaluated by actual measurement with 22-year-old subject. The measurement results show that 22-μA total current consumption is achieved with 5-ms mean absolute error.
ISSN:1557-170X
1558-4615
DOI:10.1109/EMBC.2018.8513509