Abstract
Two ultralow power CMOS full-wave precision rectifiers aimed at analog signal processing in implantable medical devices are presented. The rectifiers require no diodes and utilize a single or two transconductors (operational transconductance amplifier [OTA]) as the active element, to reduce power consumption to a minimum. First, a voltage-to-current rectifier consuming only a 120-nA supply current is presented and later is used to estimate the average AC amplitude of a piezoelectric accelerometer output (0.5–15-Hz bandwidth) in an adaptive pacemaker. This rectifier is based on a linearized transconductor and a comparator to toggle the output current sign. Then, a novel voltage rectifier consuming less than 10 nA is presented based on a single nanopower OTA and a pass transistor and later is utilized in a pacemaker's cardiac sensing channel (60–200-Hz bandwidth) circuit, incorporating the rectifier to detect positive and negative voltage signal spikes. Both rectifiers were designed in a 0.6-μm CMOS technology, fabricated, and tested, and the measurement results closely fit the expected performance.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 878-889 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | International Journal of Circuit Theory and Applications |
Volume | 49 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Mar 2021 |
Keywords
- CMOS
- OTA
- implantable medical devices
- low power
- precision rectifier