An Amplitude-Programmable Energy-Recycling High-Voltage Resonant Pulser for Battery-Powered Ultrasound Devices

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

I. Bellouki (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Nuriel N.M. Rozsa (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Z.Y. Chang (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Zhao Chen (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Mingliang Tan (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation, SonoSilicon)

M.A.P. Pertijs (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Research Group
Electronic Instrumentation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSSC.2024.3494536
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Electronic Instrumentation
Bibliographical Note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository as part of the Taverne amendment. More information about this copyright law amendment can be found at https://www.openaccess.nl. Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public. @en
Issue number
6
Volume number
60
Pages (from-to)
2048-2059
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Abstract

This article presents an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for battery-powered ultrasound (US) devices. The ASIC implements a novel energy-efficient high-voltage (HV) pulser that generates HV transmit (TX) pulses directly from a low-voltage (LV) battery supply. By means of a single off-chip inductor, energy is supplied to a US transducer in a resonant fashion, directly generating half-period sinusoidal HV pulses on the transducer, while consuming substantially less energy than a conventional class-D pulser. By recycling residual reactive energy from the transducer back to the input, the energy consumption is further reduced by more than 50%. The autocalibration techniques are leveraged to deal with tolerances of the inductor, transducer, and battery supply and thus maximize the energy efficiency. A prototype chip was fabricated in TSMC 0.18-μm HV BCD technology and used to drive external 120-pF capacitive micromachined US transducers (CMUTs) with a center frequency of approximately 2.5 MHz. Electrical measurements show that the prototype can generate pulses with a peak amplitude between 10 and 30 V accurate to within ±1 V. Acoustic measurements demonstrate successful ultrasonic pulse transmission and pulse-echo measurements. The prototype reaches a peak efficiency of 0.23 fCV 2 , which is the highest reported to date for HV pulsers targeting US imaging.

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