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      MagNI: A Magnetoelectrically Powered and Controlled Wireless Neurostimulating Implant

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          Abstract

          This paper presents the first wireless and programmable neural stimulator leveraging magnetoelectric (ME) effects for power and data transfer. Thanks to low tissue absorption, low misalignment sensitivity and high power transfer efficiency, the ME effect enables safe delivery of high power levels (a few milliwatts) at low resonant frequencies (~250 kHz) to mm-sized implants deep inside the body (30-mm depth). The presented MagNI (Magnetoelectric Neural Implant) consists of a 1.5-mm\(^2\) 180-nm CMOS chip, an in-house built 4x2 mm ME film, an energy storage capacitor, and on-board electrodes on a flexible polyimide substrate with a total volume of 8.2 mm\(^3\) . The chip with a power consumption of 23.7 \(\mu\)W includes robust system control and data recovery mechanisms under source amplitude variations (1-V variation tolerance). The system delivers fully-programmable bi-phasic current-controlled stimulation with patterns covering 0.05-to-1.5-mA amplitude, 64-to-512-\(\mu\)s pulse width, and 0-to-200Hz repetition frequency for neurostimulation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          06 July 2021
          Article
          10.1109/TBCAS.2020.3037862
          2107.02995
          9ec48587-e10c-4c43-9374-182da4e188ae

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems (TBioCAS), Volume: 14, Issue: 6, Pages: 1241-1252, Dec. 2020
          This work has been accepted to 2020 IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems (TBioCAS)
          q-bio.NC eess.SP

          Neurosciences,Electrical engineering
          Neurosciences, Electrical engineering

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