Design and Implementation of a Low-Power Low-Noise Biopotential Amplifier in 28 nm CMOS Technology with a Compact Die-Area of 2500 $μ$m$^2$
Abstract: This paper presents a compact low-power, low-noise bioamplifier for multi-channel electrode arrays, aimed at recording action potentials. The design we put forth attains a notable decrease in both size and power consumption. This is achieved by incorporating an active lowpass filter that doesn't rely on bulky DC-blocking capacitors, and by utilizing the TSMC 28 nm HPC CMOS technology. This paper presents extensive simulation results of noise and results from measured performance. With a mid-band gain of 58 dB, a -3 dB bandwidth of 7 kHz (from 150 Hz to 7.1 kHz), and an input-referred noise of 15.8 $\mu$V$_{\rm rms}$ corresponding to a NEF of 12. The implemented design achieves a favourable trade-off between noise, area, and power consumption, surpassing previous findings in terms of size and power. The amplifier occupies the smallest area of 2500 $\mu$m$2$ and consumes only 3.4 $\mu$W from a 1.2 V power supply corresponding to a power efficiency factor of 175 and an area efficiency factor of 0.43, respectively.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.