| Literature DB >> 32012022 |
Chen Shi, Tiago Costa, Jeffrey Elloian, Yihan Zhang, Kenneth L Shepard.
Abstract
Accurate monitoring of physiological temperature is important for many biomedical applications, including monitoring of core body temperature, detecting tissue pathologies, and evaluating surgical procedures involving thermal treatment such as hyperthermia therapy and tissue ablation. Many of these applications can benefit from replacing external temperature probes with injectable wireless devices. Here we present such a device for real-time in vivo temperature monitoring that relies on "chip-as-system" integration. With an on-chip piezoelectric transducer and measuring only 380 μm × 300 μm × 570 μm, the 0.065-mm3 monolithic device, in the form of a mote, harvests ultrasound energy for power and transmits temperature data through acoustic backscattering. Containing a low-power temperature sensor implemented with a subthreshold oscillator and consuming 0.813 nW at 37 °C, the mote achieves line sensitivity of 0.088 °C/V, temperature error of +0.22/-0.28 °C, and a resolution of 0.0078 °C rms. A long-term measurement with the mote reveals an Allan deviation floor of <138.6 ppm, indicating the feasibility of using the mote for continuous physiological temperature monitoring.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32012022 DOI: 10.1109/TBCAS.2020.2971066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Biomed Circuits Syst ISSN: 1932-4545 Impact factor: 3.833