On-chip implantable antennas for wireless power and data transfer in a glaucoma-monitoring SoC

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Abstract

For the first time, separate transmit and receive on-chip antennas have been designed in an eye environment for implantable intraocular pressure monitoring application. The miniaturized antennas fit on a 1.4-mm CMOS (0.18 m) chip with the rest of the circuitry. A 5.2-GHz novel inductive-fed and loaded receive monopole antenna is used for wirelessly powering the chip and is conjugately matched to the rectifier in the energy-harvesting and storage unit. The 2.4-GHz transmit antenna is an octagonal loop that also acts as the inductor of the voltage control oscillator resonant tank. To emulate the eye environment in measurements, a custom test setup is developed that comprises Plexiglass cavities filled with saline solution. A transition, employing a balun, is also designed, which transforms the differential impedance of on-chip antennas immersed in saline solution to a 50- single-ended microstrip line. The antennas on a lossy Si substrate and eye environment provide sufficient gain to establish wireless communication with an external reader placed a few centimeters away from the eye. © 2002-2011 IEEE.

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Marnat, L., Ouda, M. H., Arsalan, M., Salama, K., & Shamim, A. (2012). On-chip implantable antennas for wireless power and data transfer in a glaucoma-monitoring SoC. IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, 11, 1671–1674. https://doi.org/10.1109/LAWP.2013.2240253

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