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Journal ArticleDOI

A sub-sampling pulse-resonance OOK modulated digital ultrasound communication system for biomedical IoT

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TLDR
A pulse-resonance On-Off keying ultrasound communication microsystem is presented, a viable alternative to today’s widely used RF technologies in order to avoid the associated health risks for a specific group of interest, namely babies.
Abstract
A pulse-resonance On-Off keying ultrasound communication microsystem is presented. It is a viable alternative to today’s widely used RF technologies in order to avoid the associated health risks for a specific group of interest, namely babies. Special signal processing and circuit techniques are proposed to overcome drawbacks of classical ultrasound communications; such as echoes and excess ringing, achieving a measured communication range of 28m with a 50bits/s data rate and bit error rate (BER) of 0.01. Targeting a biomedical sensory pacifier, the proposed design needs to be insulated, small size, and low power. Utilizing a 40 kHz ultrasound transducer and a 5-pin low-power controller, a wirelessly-charged high-accuracy remote temperature sensor system with nominal average current consumption of 0.416μA is designed and tested. Multiple subsystems were merged in total volume of 12mm diameter and 15mm height, excluding the charging coil, which is designed as the pacifier’s handler. Thanks to echo avoidance, ringing suppression, dynamic detection threshold adjustment techniques along with 3-bit preamble synchronization; the proposed low-power sub-sampling IQ demodulation of OOK bits results in high-sensitivity robust ultrasound communication system without any alignment requirement for the transducers. The lifetime of the sensor prototype with 8mAh LiR battery is about 27 months.

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Proceedings Article

Short range ultrasonic communications in air using quadrature modulation

TL;DR: Results show that a quadrature phase shift keying modulation system is feasible in principle for communications over distances of several meters, using frequencies in the 200 to 400 kHz range.
References
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Journal Article

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A Ahlbom
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
TL;DR: The International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)—was established as a successor to the IRPA/INIRC, which developed a number of health criteria documents on NIR as part of WHO’s Environmental Health Criteria Programme, sponsored by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
Journal ArticleDOI

Short-range ultrasonic communications in air using quadrature modulation

TL;DR: In this article, the performance of quadrature phase shift keying over the limited bandwidth available in an ultrasonic system was evaluated using an experimental communication system, using capacitive ultrasonic sources and receivers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Short-range ultrasonic digital communications in air

TL;DR: The work uses capacitive transducers with a useful bandwidth to transmit digitally coded signals across an air gap in the laboratory, using three of the common methods used in digital communications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive effects of radiation emitted by cellular phones: The influence of exposure side and time

TL;DR: Results confirmed the existence of an effect of exposure on RT, as well as the fact that exposure duration (together with the responding hand and the side of exposure) may play an important role in producing detectable RFR effects on performance.
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