The invention generally relates to systems in which signal amplitude sensing and/or waveform envelope extraction is needed.
Cochlear implants (or bionic ears) have been implanted in tens of thousands of people worldwide. Cochlear implants typically mimic the function of the ear by stimulating neurons in the cochlea in response to sound. FIG. I shows an overview of a common signal-processing chain that may be used in a cochlear implant. Only four channels of processing are shown although cochlear implants typically have 16 channels. Sound is first sensed by a microphone 10. Pre-emphasis filtering and automatic gain control (AGC) are then performed on the input at pre-emphasis filtering and AGC unit 12. Analog implementations of the AGC require envelope detection to be performed. Bandpass filters 14, 16, 18, 20 divide the AGC output into different frequency bands. Envelope Detectors 22, 24, 26, 28 then detect the envelope of the waveform in each channel. The dynamic range of each channel's envelope output is then compressed at compression units 30, 32, 34, 36 to fit into the electrode dynamic range via the nonlinear compression blocks. Finally, the signals from each channel are modulated at modulation units 38, 40, 4244 by the compressed envelope information and sent to the electrodes to create charge-balanced current stimulation. Conventional cochlear implant systems typically employ a digital signal processor (DSP)—based system that may be worn as a pack on the belt or as a unit to be worn behind the ear.
There is a need, however, for a system and method that may be fully implanted. Reducing the power required for a cochlear implant would facilitate the development of a fully implanted system.
The invention provides an envelope detector system for detecting an envelope in a system input signal. The envelope detector system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention includes an input node for receiving an input voltage signal, a transconducting amplifier for receiving the input voltage signal and for producing an input current signal, a current mirror network for receiving the input current signal and for producing a current output signal, a capacitor for receiving the current output signal. The capacitor is coupled to an input of the transconducting amplifier. The current mirror network may include a simple 5-transistor transconducting amplifier. The invention also provides a rectifier system that includes a rectifier output node for providing a current rectifier signal, and a peak detector circuit including class A first-order log-domain low-pass filter (LPF), and a feedback loop with a non-linear one-directional circuit including transistor source follower loaded with a capacitor for setting a release time constant. The peak detector circuit also includes a peak detector output node for providing an envelope detector output signal in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
An envelope detector system in accordance with another embodiment of the invention includes an input node for receiving an input voltage signal, a transconducting amplifier for receiving the input voltage signal and for producing an input current signal, a current mirror network for receiving the input current signal and for producing a current output signal, a capacitor for receiving the current output signal. The capacitor is coupled to an input of the transconducting amplifier. The current mirror network includes an active feedback amplifier implemented as a transconducting amplifier with a floating battery. The system also includes a rectifier output node for providing a current rectifier signal, and a peak detector circuit including class A first-order log-domain low-pass filter (LPF), and a feedback loop with a non-linear one-directional circuit including transistor source follower loaded with a capacitor for setting a release time constant. The peak detector circuit also includes a peak detector output node for providing an envelope detector output signal in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
In accordance with a further embodiment, the invention provides a peak detector system that includes an input node for receiving an input current rectified signal, and a peak detector circuit including class A first-order log-domain low-pass filter (LPF), and a feedback loop with a non-linear one-directional circuit including transistor source follower loaded with a capacitor for setting a release time constant. The peak detector system also includes a peak detector output node for providing an envelope detector output signal in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
The following description may be further understood with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The drawings are shown for illustrative purposes.
Applicants have discovered that reducing the power consumption of the envelope detector in a signal processing circuit for a cochlear implant may provide significant improvements in the power requirements of cochlear implants. Applicants have further discovered that all-analog processing strategies may be employed to provide envelope detectors with microwatt and sub-microwatt power consumption that may serve as important elements in ultra-low power all-analog signal processing circuits for cochlear implants.
Envelope detection is required for gain control and spectral energy estimation. Hearing aids perform broadband and multi-band compression and require envelope detection for gain control and spectral energy estimation as well. The input to an envelope detector in a system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is a voltage but the output of the envelope detector may be a current. Translinear circuits may be used to implement a wide range of nonlinear functions on the output currents, which is useful for compression. Thus, the envelope detectors discussed below may be applicable to audio applications such as implant speech processing, speech recognition and hearing aids. If one is willing to increase power consumption, extensions to higher frequency applications such as sonar or RF demodulation are also possible.
A cochlear implant is typically battery powered and required to run off a low voltage. The cochlear implant application, therefore, offers a number of constraints on the design of envelope detectors. The envelope detector should provide frequency-independent operation over most of the audio range, from 100 Hz to 10 kHz. It should have a dynamic range of at least 60 dB for narrowband envelope detection, and 70 dB for broadband envelope detection. It should be insensitive to the input DC voltage providing a DC-offset-free current output. The envelope detector should have an adjustable attack time constant of around 10 ms, and an adjustable release time constant of around 100 ms. It should also minimize power while achieving all these specifications.
In accordance with an embodiment, the invention provides for a 75 dB, 2.8 μW, 100 Hz-10 kHz envelope detector in a 1.5 μm 2.8 V CMOS technology. The envelope detector performs input-dc-insensitive voltage-to-current-converting rectification followed by nanopower current-mode peak detection. The use of a sub-threshold wide-linear-range transconductor allows greater than 1.7 Vpp input voltage swings. This optimal performance is technology-independent for the given topology and may be improved only by using more power. A circuit topology is used to perform 140 nW peak detection with controllable attack and release time constants. The lower limits of envelope detection are determined by the more dominant of two effects: The first effect is caused by the inability of amplified high-frequency signals to exceed the dead-zone created by exponential nonlinearities in the rectifier. The second effect is due to an output current caused by thermal noise rectification. The envelope detector is useful in low power cochlear implants for the deaf, hearing aids, and speech-recognition front ends. Extension of the envelope detector to higher-frequency applications may be achieved with increased power consumption.
An envelope detector system in accordance with the first embodiment of the invention is shown in
During operation, an input voltage signal is received at the negative input of the transconducting amplifier 50, and the transconductor 50 produces a current signal Iin. On the positive half of the input current Iin the voltage at the Vl node rises slightly and the voltage at the VG node drops significantly due to the active feedback amplifier 66 (A). This turns the transistor 62 on and the transistor 60 off. Current mirror 74, 76 now mirrors this current half wave onto the output of the current conveyor 54 as well as to the output of the rectifier circuit via a transistor 58. On the negative half of the input current Iin the voltage at the Vl node drops slightly and the voltage at the VG node rises significantly due to the active feedback amplifier 66 (A). This turns the transistor 62 off and the transistor 60 on. Current mirror 70, 72 now mirrors this current half wave onto the output of the current conveyor 54. The active feedback amplifier 66 (A) drives the gates of the transistors 60 and 62 reducing the voltage swing needed at the Vl node, and keeping it almost clamped. In general, the current conveyor 54 conveys the current signal Iin to the capacitor 52 as an output current signal Iout. This current signal is integrated by the capacitor 52 and the voltage is fed back to the input of the transconductor 50 providing the first-order high-pass filter operation. The rectifier output current signal is fed into the current-mode wide-dynamic-range peak detector 56 via a transistor 58. The peak detector circuit 56 produces the envelope detector current output signal.
A rectifier system in accordance with the second embodiment of the invention is shown in
During operation, an input voltage signal is received at the negative input of the transconducting amplifier 50, and the transconductor 50 produces a current signal Iin. On the positive half of the input current Iin the voltage at the Vl node rises slightly and the voltage at the VG node drops significantly due to the active feedback amplifier 86 (A): This turns the transistor 82 on and the transistor 80 off. Current mirror 94, 96 now mirrors this current half wave onto the output of the current conveyor 54′ as well as to the rectifier system current output of the transistor 58. On the negative half of the input current Iin the voltage at the Vl node drops slightly and the voltage at the VG node rises significantly due to the active feedback amplifier 86 (A). This turns the transistor 82 off and the transistor 80 on. Current mirror 90, 92 now mirrors this current half wave onto the output of the current conveyor 54′. The active feedback amplifier 86 (A) drives the gates of the transistors 80 and 82 reducing the voltage swing needed at the Vl node, and keeping it almost clamped. In general, the current conveyor 54′ conveys the current signal Iin to the capacitor 52 as an output current signal Iout. This current signal is integrated by the capacitor 52 and the voltage is fed back to the input of the transconductor 50 providing the first-order high-pass filter operation.
The operation of the circuits is based on the fact that provided, Iout=−Iin, the voltage across the capacitor is the low pass filter transfer function Vout=Vin/(1+sC/Gm). The current through the capacitor is therefore Iout=sC•Vin/(1+sC/Gm ). If the pole
is chosen to be sufficiently below the lowest frequency of interest ƒmin=100 Hz, then Iout=Gm•Vin,AC independent of the input DC voltage or carrier frequency. In this implementation, the rectifier output current Irec is the negative half-wave corresponding to Iout=−Iin=Gm•Vin,AC with ideally zero DC offset. There is, however, one important condition: Iout=−Iin. Both the minimum detectable signal and an observed residual DC offset component of the Irec current are determined by this condition.
In certain applications, it is desirable to have Gm to be constant over a wide range of input voltages. It may also be desirable to avoid very small input signals that are prone to noise and other effects. These conditions require the use of wide-linear-range transconductor techniques to implement the Gm transconductor shown in
The class-B current mirror networks 54 and 54′ shown in
Let us assume that Iin=IO•sin(ωt) and that the dead-zone width is a constant VD peak-to-peak. The parasitic capacitance at the node Vl consists of two parts: The capacitance Cnode, due to the output wide linear range transconductor parasitics and node capacitance, and Cp, the gate-to-source parasitics of Mn and Mp. Usually Cnode>>Cp. If the amplitude IO is small enough as to be guaranteed not to turn Mn and Mp on, then
where A•Cp represents the Miller multiplication of source-to-gate capacitances of Mn and Mp. Then,
and increases as we increase IO. Finally, as VG approaches
the current starts to come out.
Thus, the minimum detectable Iin current is given by
provided that the gain A is high enough. Since the maximum possible In current is the effective bias current of the wide linear range transconductor, N•IB, we obtain a dead-zone output dynamic range limitation in currents DO given by the ratio of N•IB to Iin,MIN to be,
Since the transconductor is just linear over this range of operation of currents, the dynamic range in input voltages is the same as the dynamic range in the output currents and also given by Equation (4). It is necessary to spend power by increasing IB if it is desirable to have a large dynamic range DO or a large frequency of operation ƒmax . In other words, power is necessary to get both speed and precision. Equation (4) quantifies the earlier power-speed tradeoff discussion.
It is important to have the gate-to-source capacitances that constitute Cp be as small as possible to obtain a large dynamic range. This is a reason for using minimum size devices for Mn and Mp, and to connect the well of the Mp device to VDD rather than to its source although this increases the dead-zone VD, and operate in sub-threshold as far as possible since the only contributor to the gate-to-source capacitances in sub-threshold are overlap capacitances in Mn and Mp. Tying the well of the Mp device to VDD increases VD somewhat, but the decrease in Cp due to the exclusion of Cgb is a far more substantial effect, especially on the low end of the dynamic range that we are interested in, where Mn and Mp are in sub-threshold, and Cgb is the major contributor to Cp.
A further improvement in DO is possible by reducing the dead-zone VD.
During operation, an input voltage signal is received at the negative input of the transconducting amplifier 50, and the transconductor 50 produces a current signal Iin. On the positive half of the input current Iin the voltage at the Vl node rises slightly and the feedback amplifier 106 moves the voltage at the Vout,BOT node low enough for the transistor 102 to sink the input current. Current mirror 114, 116 then mirrors this current half wave onto the output of the modified current conveyor 54″ as well as to the output of the rectifier circuit via a transistor 58. The voltage at the Vout,TOP node is higher by VO, and needs to go up by only VD–VO to open the transistor 100 to source the input current Iin as its sign changes. Therefore, the dead-zone is reduced to VD–VO. Current mirror 110, 112 then mirrors that current half wave onto the output of the modified current conveyor 54″. The feedback amplifier 106 keeps the Vl node almost clamped. In general, the modified current conveyor 54″ conveys the current signal Iin to the capacitor 52 as an output current signal Iout .This current signal is integrated by the capacitor 52 and the voltage is fed back to the input of the transconductor 50 providing the first-order high-pass filter operation. The rectifier output current signal is fed into the current-mode wide-dynamic-range peak detector 56 via a transistor 58. The peak detector circuit 56 produces the envelope detector current output signal.
A rectifier system in accordance with the forth embodiment of the invention is shown in
During operation, an input voltage signal is received at the negative input of the transconducting amplifier 50, and the transconductor 50 produces a current signal Iin. On the positive half of the input current Iin the voltage at the Vl node rises slightly and the feedback amplifier 126 moves the voltage at the Vout,BOT node low enough for the transistor 122 to sink the input current. Current mirror 134, 136 then mirrors this current half wave onto the output of the modified current conveyor 54′″ as well as to the rectifier system current output of the transistor 58. The voltage at the Vout,TOP node is higher by VO, and needs to go up by only VD–VO to open the transistor 120 to source the input current Iin as its sign changes. Therefore, the dead-zone is reduced to VD–VO. Current mirror 130, 132 then mirrors that current half wave onto the output of the modified current conveyor 54′″. The feedback amplifier 126 keeps the Vl node almost clamped. In general, the modified current conveyor 54′″ conveys the current signal Iin to the capacitor 52 as an output current signal Iout. This current signal is integrated by the capacitor 52 and the voltage is fed back to the input of the transconductor 50 providing the first-order high-pass filter operation.
The desired dead-zone reduction, therefore, may be accomplished by introducing a constant DC voltage shift VO between the gates of the Mn and Mp rectifying devices. The dead-zone is reduced to VD–VO. This dead-zone reduction technique is limited however because of an upper bound on VO. From applying the translinear principle, it follows that this technique will result in an output offset current—even with no Iin current present, Vout,BOT and Vout,TOP gate voltages will be set by the A amplifier such that the Mn and Mp standby currents (zero-input currents) are equal. These standby currents have an exponential dependence on VO and are mirrored directly to the output of the rectifier stage. This zero-input offset current should be no more than a few pA, thus setting a ceiling on VO of approximately 1.55 V in the MOSIS 1.5 um process for minimum size Mn and Mp. It is possible to have dummy devices and subtract some of these standby currents, but as discussed below, having a large VO where such subtraction would be beneficial is undesirable because of thermal noise rectification. The class AB VO technique yields a dead-zone reduction from 2.2 Vpp to 0.65 Vpp—an improvement of a factor of 3, or 10 dB in DO.
During operation of the circuit of
The noise of the wide linear range transconductor also results in another limitation on the system dynamic range. For certain device sizes and currents the effect of 1/f noise in the circuit is negligible in sub-threshold operation. The thermal noise current at the wide linear range transconductor output, however, is fed to the current conveyor, rectified by it, and mirrored to the output, creating a residual output current floor that degrades the minimum detectable signal and dynamic range of the system. The current power spectral density of the white noise at the wide linear range transconductor output is
īnoise2 (ƒ)=n•q•NIB, (5)
where,
represents the effective number of noise sources in our wide linear range transconductor, κn is the sub-threshold exponential parameter of the NMOS transistors in the current mirror of the wide linear range transconductor, and κ is the sub-threshold exponential parameter of the differential-pair PMOS transistors.
From the above discussion about the dead-zone limitation, it is clear that the higher the frequency of the input current, the higher the threshold presented by the dead-zone
Iin,MIN=πƒ•Cp•(VD–VO) (7)
Almost all of the low-frequency part of the white noise spectrum passes to the output, whereas the high-frequency part gets filtered out by the capacitor Cp. For simplicity, assume that the dead-zone and Cp create a low-pass filter with an infinitely steep slope at a still-to-be-determined cut-off frequency ƒo. With this assumption, our current conveyor behaves as if the Iin current were Gaussian with zero mean and
σ2=n•q•NIB•ƒo (8)
Then,
To estimate the cut-off frequency ƒO note that once the frequency-dependent threshold presented by the dead-zone in Equation (7) gets higher than the σ of Equation (8), little current is output by the rectifier. A reasonable estimate therefore, is to assume that the frequency-dependent threshold at ƒo is at σ. Thus,
Providing the result for ƒo back into Equation (9):
Recalling Equation (4) for the dead-zone dynamic range limitation provides:
In accordance with the embodiment of the invention of n≈15.4,q=1.6•10−19C,DO was designed and simulated to be 80 dB=104 for ƒMAX=10 kHz, IB=200 nA (bias current through wide linear range transconductor 50), and Ib2=200 nA (bias current A amplifier yielding VO=1.55 V and a deadzone of 0.65 V pp). This provides that Īrec=100 pA . The corresponding experimentally measured result is Īrec=119 pA, indicating that the above approximations and assumptions are sound.
The larger one makes DO to increase the minimum detectable signal limited by the dead-zone non-linearity, the higher the rectified-noise-current floor becomes, and the greater is the degradation in minimum detectable signal caused by this current floor. Since the overall dynamic range of the system is determined by whichever effect yields a larger minimum detectable signal (dead-zone limitation or noise-rectification), the maximum dynamic range is achieved if both effects yield the same limit. At this optimum, as much power as necessary is being spent to achieve the highest DO possible but not so much power is being spent that the rectification-noise-floor increases and limits the dynamic range to values below DO.
Alternatively, at a fixed power level, if the dead-zone and noise-rectification limits match, the dead-zone is at a small enough value such that it may be overcome with faint amplified signals but not too small of signals that the rectified-noise-current floor swamps the output current due to the faint signals. Thus, the optimum dynamic range is achieved when the limit of minimum detectable signal due to the rectified-noise-current floor of Equation (11) becomes equal to the mean value of the dead-zone minimum detectable current. The dead-zone minimum detectable current is a half-wave rectified sinusoid with an amplitude given by Equation (7). A half-wave-rectified sine wave has a mean current that is 1/π of its amplitude. Referring to Equations (11) and (7) it may be discovered that
Algebraic simplification yields
Substituting this result back into Equation (4) provides
The optimal dynamic range therefore depends on topological parameters only such as n and N, the charge on the electron q, and is independent of technological parameters like Cp and VD. To achieve more dynamic range at a given ƒMAX and in a given technology, more power must be spent according to Equation (15), and simultaneously decrease VO in Equation (14) to ensure that the optimum location is provided. Intuitively, one bums power to allow smaller and smaller signals to break the dead-zone but concomitantly increase the dead-zone such that the noise-rectification limit always matches the dead-zone limit.
Due to the power constraints, only IB=200 nA may be afforded in the present embodiment. According to Equation (15), that gives us a maximum possible system dynamic range of Doptimum≈75 dB. In order to reach this optimum VO is decreased, and the dead-zone is increased, by turning down the bias current Ib2 of the A amplifier.
During operation of the circuit of
where
and κ is the subthreshold slope coefficient.
As the input current Iin increases during an attack phase, the VO voltage decreases. This decrease causes the drain current of the transistor 174 to decrease. The current Ia from the current source 180 then quickly discharges parasitic capacitance Cpar decreasing Vl. The decrease in Vl causes transistor 182 to open and to quickly decrease the voltage on the node V2, thus restoring the drain current of the transistor 174. Therefore, the transistor 174 behaves like a voltage shifter during the attack phase of the input current Iin. Transistor 188 then converts the voltage on the node V2 into an output current of the peak detector system. Peak detector adjustable attack time constant is therefore given by Equation (16). As the input current Iin decreases during a release phase, the VO voltage goes up. This causes the drain current of the transistor 174 to increase, increasing the Vl voltage sharply, which turns off transistor 182 and restores the drain current of the transistor 174. Now, the voltage on the node V2 changes only due to charging of the capacitor 186 (Cr) by the current from the current source 184 (Ir). Transistor 188 then converts the voltage on the node V2 into an output current of the peak detector system. Peak detector adjustable release time constant is given by
The feedback loop formed by M5 and M3 is similar to the one in the simple peak-detector topology (such as disclosed in “A Low-Power Wide-Dynamic Range Analog VLSI Cochlea”, by R. Sarpeshkar, R. F. Lyon, and C. A. Mead, Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, v.16, pp. 245–274, 1998). To provide good phase margin, the current Ia has to satisfy
where
Unlike in the simple peak-detector topology (such as disclosed in “A Low-Power Wide-Dynamic Range Analog VLSI Cochlea”, by R. Sarpeshkar, R. F. Lyon, and C. A. Mead, Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, v.16, pp. 245–274, 1998), the good-phase-margin conditions do not affect the dynamic range of operation, because all currents in the M3–M5 feedback loop are fixed.
The peak-detector topology of
An integrated circuit chip with this envelope detector may be fabricated using a 1.5 um CMOS process.
The combination of a wide-linear-range transconductor topology, a modified current conveyor, and a novel current-mode peak-detector yielded a 75 dB 2.8 μ W envelope detector with frequency-independent operation over the entire audio range from 100 Hz to 10 kHz. The current-mode peak detector provided wide-dynamic-range good-phase-margin operation with adjustable attack and release time constants. Theoretical predictions of the minimum detectable signal of the envelope detector due to dead-zone-limiting effects and thermal-noise-rectification effects may be confirmed experimentally. Maximum possible dynamic range predicted from theory may also be achieved. The detector should be useful in ultra low power bionic implants for the deaf, hearing aids, and low-power speech-recognition front ends where automatic gain control and spectral-energy computations require the use of envelope detection. The topology of the detector could also potentially be useful in higher-frequency applications like sonar or RF-demodulation if more power is consumed.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that numerous modifications and variations may be made to the above disclosed embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/488,147 filed Jul. 17, 2003.
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