We certify that written approval has been obtained for any proprietary material contained therein. Dedicated to my advisor professor, Soumyajit Mandal, who taught me useful IC design knowledge and shared his rich and precious circuit experience with me. Dedicated to my mother, Chunlian Liu, who gives me endless love and support. Dedicated to my friend, Jifu Liang, who gave me detailed and patient explanations to my academic questions.
Coaxial cables commonly used to connect radio-frequency (RF) coil arrays with the control console of an MRI scanner are susceptible to electromagnetic coupling. As the number of RF channels increases, such coupling could result in severe heating and pose a safety concern. Non-conductive transmission solutions based on fiber-optic cables are considered to be one of the alternatives but are limited by the high dynamic range (>80 dB) of typical MRI signals. A new digital fiber-optic transmission system based on delta–sigma modulation (DSM) is developed to address this problem. A DSM-based optical link is prototyped using off-the-shelf components and bench-tested at different signal oversampling rates (OSRs). An end-to-end dynamic range (DR) of 81 dB, which is sufficient for typical MRI signals, is obtained over a bandwidth of 200 kHz, which corresponds to OSR = 50. A fully integrated custom fourth-order continuous-time DSM is designed in 180 nm CMOS technology to enable transmission of full-bandwidth MRI signals (up to 1 MHz) with an adequate DR. Initial electrical test results from this custom chip are also presented.
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