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Nature Inspires Radio
Frequency (RF) Cochlea
June 8, 2009
MIT engineers have built a fast, ultra-broadband, low-power radio chip,
modeled on the human inner ear, that could enable wireless devices
capable of receiving cell phone, Internet, radio and television signals.
A close-up of the RF
cochlea and antenna.
Rahul Sarpeshkar, associate professor of electrical engineering and
computer science, and his graduate student, Soumyajit Mandal, designed
the chip to mimic the inner ear, or cochlea. The chip is faster than any
human-designed radio-frequency spectrum analyzer and also operates at
much lower power.
"The cochlea quickly gets the big picture of what's going on in the
sound spectrum," said Sarpeshkar. "The more I started to look at the
ear, the more I realized it's like a super radio with 3,500 parallel
channels."
Sarpeshkar and his students describe their new chip, which they have
dubbed the "radio frequency (RF) cochlea," in a paper to be published in
the June issue of the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits. They have
also filed for a patent to incorporate the RF cochlea in a universal or
software radio architecture that is designed to efficiently process a
broad spectrum of signals including cellular phone, wireless Internet,
FM, and other signals.
Copying the cochlea
The RF cochlea mimics the structure
and function of the biological cochlea, which uses fluid mechanics,
piezoelectrics and neural signal processing to convert sound waves into
electrical signals that are sent to the brain.
As sound waves enter the cochlea, they create mechanical waves in the
cochlear membrane and the fluid of the inner ear, activating hair cells
(cells that cause electrical signals to be sent to the brain). The
cochlea can perceive a 100-fold range of frequencies -- in humans, from
100 to 10,000 Hz. Sarpeshkar used the same design principles in the RF
cochlea to create a device that can perceive signals at million-fold
higher frequencies, which includes radio signals for most commercial
wireless applications.
The device demonstrates what can happen when researchers take
inspiration from fields outside their own, says Sarpeshkar.
"Somebody who works in radio would never think of this, and somebody who
works in hearing would never think of it, but when you put the two
together, each one provides insight into the other," he says. For
example, in addition to its use for radio applications, the work
provides an analysis of why cochlear spectrum analysis is faster than
any known spectrum-analysis algorithm. Thus, it sheds light on the
mechanism of hearing as well.
The RF cochlea, embedded on a silicon chip measuring 1.5 mm by 3 mm,
works as an analog spectrum analyzer, detecting the composition of any
electromagnetic waves within its perception range. Electromagnetic waves
travel through electronic inductors and capacitors (analogous to the
biological cochlea's fluid and membrane). Electronic transistors play
the role of the cochlea's hair cells.
The analog RF cochlea chip is faster than any other RF spectrum analyzer
and consumes about 100 times less power than what would be required for
direct digitization of the entire bandwidth. That makes it desirable as
a component of a universal or "cognitive" radio, which could receive a
broad range of frequencies and select which ones to attend to.
Biological inspiration
This is not the first time Sarpeshkar
has drawn on biology for inspiration in designing electronic devices.
Trained as an engineer but also a student of biology, he has found many
similar patterns in the natural and man-made worlds. For example,
Sarpeshkar's group, in MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics, has
also developed an analog speech-synthesis chip inspired by the human
vocal tract and a novel analysis-by-synthesis technique based on the
vocal tract. The chip's potential for robust speech recognition in noise
and its potential for voice identification have several applications in
portable devices and security applications.
The
researchers have built circuits that can analyze heart rhythms for
wireless heart monitoring, and are also working on projects inspired by
signal processing in cells. In the past, his group has worked on hybrid
analog-digital signal processors inspired by neurons in the brain.
Sarpeshkar says that engineers can learn a great deal from studying
biological systems that have evolved over hundreds of millions of years
to perform sensory and motor tasks very efficiently in noisy
environments while using very little power.
"Humans have a long way to go before their architectures will
successfully compete with those in nature, especially in situations
where ultra-energy-efficient or ultra-low-power operation are
paramount," he said. Nevertheless, "We can mine the intellectual
resources of nature to create devices useful to humans, just as we have
mined her physical resources in the past. |