Batteryless implantable medical devices (IMDs) require tens of μW to mW-level power while operating under stringent size constraints, uncertain post-implant orientation, and high body-channel attenuation that forces high-ratio voltage multiplication and slow energy accumulation. This paper presents a Inductive-Capacitive dual mode wireless power transfer (WPT) system that improves charging latency and link robustness by combining three techniques: (i) a split rectifier (REC) architecture with temporal energy combining to mitigate stage-leakage and accelerate energy accumulation, (ii) an orthogonal coil-fed cuboid receiver that provides spatially neutral (orientation-independent) operation, and (iii) dual-mode inductive-capacitive powering by reusing the same conductors as both inductive coils and capacitive electrodes. A load-isolating switch (LIS) further suppresses leakage during startup, reducing the average load-leakage. Fabricated in 65-nm CMOS, the 0.19 mm2 prototype achieves ~3.4× faster charging compared to the TEG/solar based prior-art design. In addition, under identical input conditions of -12 dBm at 70 MHz, the proposed 4 × 60-stage split-rectifier architecture demonstrates approximately 4× reduction in charging time compared to a conventional 240-stage implementation. The WPT system achieves a minimum input power sensitivity of -26 dBm (2.5 μW) and operates with input amplitudes down to ~30 mV, enabling compact, faststarting, and spatially robust wireless powering for IMDs.
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Barik et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d892886c1944d70ce03ea6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tbcas.2026.3680951
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context:
Gourab Barik
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IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems
University of Florida
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