A Low Power and Fast Tracking Light-to-Frequency Converter With Adaptive Power Scaling for Blood SpO[Formula Omitted] Sensing

This paper presents a monolithic low power and fast tracking light-to-frequency converter for blood SpO[Formula Omitted] sensing. Normally, the tracking speed and the power consumption are two contradictory characteristics. However, different gain-bandwidth specifications for various ambient light i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems Vol. 13; no. 1; p. 26
Main Authors Tang, Fang, Zhou, Shu, Li, Mingdong, Hu, Yi, Zhou, Xichuan, Hu, Shengdong, Lin, Zhi, Gan, Ping, Huang, Tiancong, Bermak, Amine
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE) 01.02.2019
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Summary:This paper presents a monolithic low power and fast tracking light-to-frequency converter for blood SpO[Formula Omitted] sensing. Normally, the tracking speed and the power consumption are two contradictory characteristics. However, different gain-bandwidth specifications for various ambient light intensities allow the dynamic optimization of the power consumption according to the light intensity. In this paper, the amplifier power consumption is adaptively scaled by the generated light-intensity-positively-correlated control voltage. Thus, the chip total power consumption at low light intensity is significantly decreased. Moreover, the proposed adaptive power scaling is achieved with a continuous analog domain, which does not introduce extra switching noise. The proposed light-to-frequency sensor chip is fabricated by using 0.35 [Formula Omitted] CMOS technology with a die area of 1 × 0.9 mm[Formula Omitted]. The measurement results show that the pulse light response for any light intensity is no longer than two new output square-wave cycles. The maximum total current consumption is 1.9 mA from a 3.3 V supply voltage, which can be adaptively scaled down to only 0.7 mA if the output frequency is about 25 KHz or lower. The minimum operational supply voltage of the proposed sensor chip is 2.5 V in the temperature range of –25 to 80 [Formula Omitted]C with 4 KV ESD level (human-body model).
ISSN:1932-4545
1940-9990
DOI:10.1109/TBCAS.2018.2889745