288
IRUS Total
Downloads
  Altmetric

Development of a sub-miniature acoustic sensor for wireless monitoring of heart rate

File Description SizeFormat 
Tosanguan-T-2009-PhD-Thesis.pdf8 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Title: Development of a sub-miniature acoustic sensor for wireless monitoring of heart rate
Authors: Tosanguan, Thanut
Item Type: Thesis or dissertation
Abstract: This thesis presents the development of a non-invasive, wireless, low-power, phonocardiographic (PCG) or heart sound sensor platform suitable for long-term monitoring of heart function. The core of this development process involves a study of the feasibility of this conceptual system and the development of a prototype mixed-signals integrated circuit (IC) to form the integral component of the proposed sensor. The feasibility study of the proposed long-term monitoring sensor is divided into two main parts. The first part of the study investigates the technological aspect of the conceptual system, via a system level design. This is to prove the technological or operational feasibility of the system, where the system can be built completely using discrete, off-the-shelf electronics components to satisfy the size, power consumption, battery life and operational requirements of the sensor platform. The second part of the study concentrates on the post-processing of the heart sounds and murmurs or PCG data recorded. This is where a number of different de-noising algorithms are studied and their relative performance compared when applied to a variety of different noisy heart sound signals that would likely be acquired using the proposed sensor in everyday life. This was done to demonstrate the functional feasibility of the proposed system, where the ambient acoustic noise in the recorded PCG data can be effectively suppressed and therefore meaningful analysis of heart function i.e. heart rate, can be performed on the data. After the feasibility of the conceptual system has been demonstrated, the final part of this thesis discusses the synthesis and testing of a 0.35 μm CMOS technology prototype mixed analog-digital integrated circuit (IC) to miniaturise part of this sensor platform outlined in the system level design, conducted in the earlier part of this thesis, to achieve the objective specifications – in terms of the size and power consumption. A new implementation of the multi-tanh triplet transconductor is introduced to construct a pair of 100 nW analogue 4th order Gm-C signal conditioning filters. Furthermore, a 7 μW digital circuit was designed to drive the analog-to-digital conversion cycle of the Linear Technology LTC1288 ADC and synchronise the ADC’s output to generate the Manchester encoded data compatible with the Holt Integrated Circuit HI-15530 Manchester Encoder/Decoder.
Issue Date: Oct-2009
Date Awarded: Oct-2009
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/4716
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25560/4716
Supervisor: Dickinson, Robert
Drakakis, Manos
Author: Tosanguan, Thanut
Department: Bioengineering
Publisher: Imperial College London
Qualification Level: Doctoral
Qualification Name: Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Appears in Collections:Bioengineering PhD theses



Unless otherwise indicated, items in Spiral are protected by copyright and are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives License.

Creative Commons