Premium
High‐voltage compliant microelectrode array drivers for intracortical microstimulation
Author(s) -
Hasanuzzaman Md.,
Raut Rabin,
Sawan Mohamad
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international journal of circuit theory and applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.364
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1097-007X
pISSN - 0098-9886
DOI - 10.1002/cta.2099
Subject(s) - microelectrode , voltage , electrical impedance , multielectrode array , electrical engineering , materials science , cmos , output impedance , voltage source , microstimulation , power (physics) , current source , optoelectronics , electrode , engineering , physics , stimulation , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , biology
Summary We present in this paper two low‐power high‐impedance microelectrode array drivers (MEDs) dedicated for visual intracortical microstimulation. These output stages of a new microstimulator are highly configurable and able to deliver higher compliance voltage (20 V for anodic and cathodic phases) across microelectrode‐tissue interface impedance compared with previously reported designs. Each MED is featured with a high‐voltage switch‐matrix, 3.3 V/20 V current mirrors, an on‐chip 32‐bit serial‐in parallel‐out shift register, and the new forbidden state logic circuits. Both systems are able to deliver eight bipolar or 16 monopolar stimulation simultaneously. The first MED is able to deliver one stimulation current level and the second one provides four different current amplitudes simultaneously to 16 electrodes. Two microchips have been designed and fabricated using Teledyne DALSA 0.8 µm 5V/ 20v double‐diffused metal‐oxide‐semiconductor field‐effect transistor (Teledyne DALSA Semiconductor, Bromont, Québec, Canada) technology to meet the required high‐voltage compliance. The nominal values of largest supply voltages are ±10 V. The maximum stimulation current per input channel is 400 μA and per output channel through an emulated microelectrode impedance of 100 kΩ is 100 μA. The measured output compliance voltage is 10 V/phase (anodic or cathodic) for the specified supply voltages. Increment of supply voltages to ±13 V allows 220 μA stimulation current per output channel enhancing the output compliance voltage up to 20 V/phase. The measured quiescent power consumptions of the proposed microelectrode array drivers are 316 and 735 μW, respectively. Post‐layout simulation and measurement results of two MEDs and comparison with other designs have been reported in this paper. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.