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Power Line Interference Reduction Technique with a Current-Reused Current-Feedback Instrumentation Amplifier for ECG Recording

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TLDR
Donggeun You 1, Hyunwoo Heo 2, Hyungseup Kim 1 , Yongsu Kwon 1, Sangmin Lee 2 and Hyoungho Ko 1,* 1 Department of Electronics Engineering, Chungnam National University, Daejeon 34134, Korea.
Abstract
This paper presents a power line interference (PLI) reduction technique with a current-reused current-feedback instrumentation amplifier (CFIA) for electrocardiogram (ECG) recording. In a portable two-electrode ECG monitoring application, the presence of undesired PLI may severely corrupt the quality of ECG recording. Since PLI can be over a few volts, the input signal including the ECG signal can exceed the supply or ground level by an electrostatic discharge (ESD) diode in input/output (I/O) pad. To prevent this problem, this paper presents a continuous-time input common-mode current feedback loop that can limit displacement current from a capacitive coupling between the human body and a power line. The continuous-time input common-mode current feedback loop can clamp an input common-mode voltage to the saturation region of the input transistor of the current-reused CFIA. After the clamping procedure, the clamped input signal is amplified by the current-reused CFIA. The proposed circuit was designed using a 0.18-μm bipolar-complementary metal semiconductor–double-diffused metal oxide semiconductor (BCDMOS) process with an active area of 1.8 mm2. The total power consumption is 18 μW with 1.8 V. The input-referred noise and noise efficiency factor (NEF) of the current-reused CFIA is 2.68 μVRMS and 4.28 with 107 Hz, respectively.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Robust and Power-Efficient Power Line Interference Canceling VLSI Design

TL;DR: In this paper, a low power dissipation VLSI hardware architecture for a robust power line interference canceling (PLIC) was proposed, which has just four clock cycles of latency per sample.
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Low-Noise, Low-Power Readout IC for Two-Electrode ECG Recording Using Common-Mode Charge Pump for Robust 20-VPP Common-Mode Interference

TL;DR: In this article , a low-noise and power readout integrated circuit (IC) for two-electrode electrocardiogram (ECG) recording is developed using a commonmode charge pump (CMCP) for a robust 20-VPP common-mode interference (CMI).
References
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Driven-right-leg circuit design

TL;DR: The driven-right-leg circuit is analyzed and it is shown that high loop gains can cause instability and equations that can be used to design circuits that minimize common mode voltage without instability are presented.

ECG Signal Analysis Using Wavelet Transforms

TL;DR: In the first step an attempt was made to generate ECG wave- forms by developing a suitable MATLAB simulator and in the second step, using wavelet transform, the ECG signal was denoised by removing the corresponding wavelet coefficients at higher scales.
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Ground-Free ECG Recording with Two Electrodes

TL;DR: A model for the source of electrical interference and various parameter values are proposed and made use of experimentally obtained data for the model parameters to suggest optimal design for a two-electrode amplifier.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dry electrodes for monitoring of vital signs in functional textiles

TL;DR: Dry electrodes based on conductive rubber are described, which can be integrated into clothing for monitoring purposes and characteristic electrical properties like warm up time, skin-electrode impedance and motion artefacts will be discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Low-Noise, Low-Power Amplifier With Current-Reused OTA for ECG Recordings

TL;DR: This paper presents a low-power and low-noise capacitive-feedback amplifier with a current-reused OTA for ECG recordings that adopts an inverter-based differential input stage for low noise, and a class-AB output stage for large output range and high gm/I efficiency.
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