Exploiting Self-Capacitances for Wireless Power Transfer

scientific article published on 20 February 2019

Exploiting Self-Capacitances for Wireless Power Transfer is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P8978DBLP publication IDjournals/tbcas/AlazzawiASC19
P356DOI10.1109/TBCAS.2019.2900433
P932PMC publication ID6503679
P698PubMed publication ID30794517

P50authorErica L. SchellerQ38544080
Kenji AonoQ45342834
P2093author name stringShantanu Chakrabartty
Yarub Alazzawi
P2860cites workWireless Recording in the Peripheral Nervous System with Ultrasonic Neural DustQ28119317
In vivo demonstration of ultrasound power delivery to charge implanted medical devices via acute and survival porcine studies.Q30367075
Fully Implantable Deep Brain Stimulation System with Wireless Power Transmission for Long-term Use in Rodent Models of Parkinson's DiseaseQ35215547
EnerCage: a smart experimental arena with scalable architecture for behavioral experimentsQ37586490
Multi-access In-vivo Biotelemetry using Sonomicrometry and M-Scan Ultrasound Imaging.Q38811220
Enabling wireless powering and telemetry for peripheral nerve implants.Q41017578
Equation environment coupling and interference on the electric-field intrabody communication channelQ45799647
Investigation and Modeling of Capacitive Human Body Communication.Q47226105
Compensating for Tissue Changes in an Ultrasonic Power Link for Implanted Medical Devices.Q50966832
Transmitting electric energy through a metal wall by acoustic waves using piezoelectric transducersQ73743258
Optimal Design of Wireless Power Transmission Links for Millimeter-Sized Biomedical ImplantsQ86587944
P433issue2
P304page(s)425-434
P577publication date2019-02-20
P1433published inIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and SystemsQ15753662
P1476titleExploiting Self-Capacitances for Wireless Power Transfer
P478volume13