Bi-Phasic Quasistatic Brain Communication for Fully Untethered Connected Brain Implants
Baibhab Chatterjee, Mayukh Nath, Gaurav Kumar K, Shulan Xiao, Krishna, Jayant, Shreyas Sen

TL;DR
This paper introduces BP-QBC, a low-power, high-efficiency brain communication method that significantly reduces energy loss and transduction needs, enabling scalable data rates for fully untethered brain implants.
Contribution
The paper presents BP-QBC, a novel quasistatic brain communication technique that achieves low channel loss and power consumption without transduction losses, surpassing traditional methods.
Findings
Achieves < 60dB channel loss at 55mm
Reduces power consumption by 41X compared to galvanic HBC
Supports scalable data rates up to 10 Mbps
Abstract
Wireless communication using electro-magnetic (EM) fields acts as the backbone for information exchange among wearable devices around the human body. However, for Implanted devices, EM fields incur high amount of absorption in the tissue, while alternative modes of transmission including ultrasound, optical and magneto-electric methods result in large amount of transduction losses due to conversion of one form of energy to another, thereby increasing the overall end-to-end energy loss. To solve the challenge of powering and communication in a brain implant with low end-end channel loss, we present Bi-Phasic Quasistatic Brain Communication (BP-QBC), achieving < 60dB worst-case end-to-end channel loss at a channel length of 55mm, by avoiding the transduction losses during field-modality conversion. BP-QBC utilizes dipole coupling based signal transmission within the brain tissue using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Wireless Body Area Networks · Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks
