A miniature transformer/dc-dc converter for implantable medical devices
- 15 November 1988
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 64 (10) , 5856-5858
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.342205
Abstract
This paper presents a new technique for the design of a miniature dc-dc converter used in energy producing implantable devices such as defibrillators and advanced pacemakers. This converter is inserted in such a device and is used to boost the voltage from a low voltage implanted battery to high voltage energy storage capacitors in a short period of time. The stored energy is then delivered, when needed, through an energy delivery circuit in order to stimulate or defibrillate the heart. The converter takes the form of a flyback topology which includes a miniature transformer and a specialized control circuit. The transformer was designed using a new numerical synthesis method which utilizes finite elements and dynamic programming for predicting the geometries of the transformer’s magnetic circuit. The final transformer design satisfied the performance criteria and provided means for selecting the converter components. The obtained performance results for the transformer and the dc-dc converter were in excellent agreement with laboratory performance tests.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- An extremely fast technique for nonlinear three dimensional finite element magnetic field computationsIEEE Transactions on Magnetics, 1987
- Transformer Computer Design Aid for Higher Frequency Switching Power SuppliesIEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, 1986
- Electromagnetic field modeling of implantable telemetry systemsIEEE Transactions on Magnetics, 1985