9 research outputs found

    An Energy-Efficient 1.2V 4-Channel Wireless CMOS Potentiostat for Amperometric Biosensors

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    Point-of-care (PoC) diagnostics rely on the design of low-power and miniaturized readout units that can offer rapid and accurate test results, replacing the need for specialized equipment. CMOS technology can be exploited in order to design complex systems while achieving high energy efficiency for suitable operation in a mobile settings. This paper presents the design of a novel energy-efficient 4-channel wireless potentiostat chip, based on a dual-slope ADC architecture, that features a low-complexity wireless unit and a calibration approach that does not require additional circuitry. The chip was designed in a 0.35ÎĽm CMOS process. The simulated results suggest that each potentiostat channel can achieve an estimated energy efficiency of 2.5 pJ/bit from a 1.2 V supply

    Rapport annuel 2015

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    Advances in nanomaterials integration in CMOS-based electrochemical sensors: a review

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    The monolithic integration of electrochemical sensors with instrumentation electronics on semiconductor technology is a promising approach to achieve sensor scalability, miniaturization and increased signal to noise ratio. Such an integration requires post-process modification of microchips (or wafers) fabricated in standard semiconductor technology (e.g. CMOS) to develop sensitive and selective sensing electrodes. This review focuses on the post-process fabrication techniques for addition of nanomaterials to the electrode surface, a key component in the construction of electrochemical sensors that has been widely used to achieve surface reactivity and sensitivity. Several CMOS-compatible techniques are summarized and discussed in this review for the deposition of nanomaterials such as gold, platinum, carbon nanotubes, polymers and metal oxide/nitride nanoparticles. These techniques include electroless deposition, electro-chemical deposition, lift-off, micro-spotting, dip-pen lithography, physical adsorption, self-assembly and hydrothermal methods. Finally, the review is concluded and summarized by stating the advantages and disadvantages of these deposition methods

    Rapport annuel 2016

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    Conception et fabrication d'un biocapteur à haute sensibilité pour la détection des neurotransmetteurs

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    Dans ce mémoire, nous présentons de nouvelles architectures de différents biocapteurs électrochimiques discrets et intégrés appelés potentiostats. Tous les potentiostats développés sont basés sur une structure entièrement différentielle pour une meilleure sensibilité et une meilleure précision. Deux conceptions discrètes à un et quatre canaux ont été proposées. La conception discrète à un canal détecte la molécule de dopamine avec un courant de l’ordre du nA et une consommation électrique de 120 mW. Cette architecture a été développée sur une carte de circuit imprimé (PCB) de 20 mm x 35 mm. L’architecture discrète à quatre canaux est la version améliorée de la précédente en termes de superficie, de sensibilité et de consommation électrique. Une autre version du potentiostat, implémentée sur un PCB de 15 mm x 15 mm, peut mesurer les courants d’oxydoréduction dans la plage du pA avec une consommation de puissance de 60 mW. L’avantage de la structure à multicanaux est qu’elle offre des sensibilités différentes allant du pA au mA pour chaque canal. Une chambre microfluidique de 7,5 mm x 5 mm avec deux entrées et une sortie a été déposée sur le PCB. Une solution saline tampon au phosphate (PBS) avec une solution de ferrocyanure a été utilisée pour tester la fonctionnalité du système réalisé. La voltampérométrie cyclique a été utilisée comme technique de détection. Un comportement linéaire a été observé lorsque la concentration des neurotransmetteurs change. De plus, un potentiostat intégré a été proposé et fabriqué en technologie CMOS 180 nm, basé sur une structure entièrement « différentiel de différence » (Fully Differential Diffrence Amplifier FDDA) pour une faible consommation de puissance et un système à haute sensibilité. Cette nouvelle configuration a été conçue pour la détection des neurotransmetteurs en très faible concentration avec un faible bruit et une plage dynamique élevée. Cette architecture intégrée peut détecter les courants dans une plage inférieure au pA avec un bruit d’entrée faible de 6,9 μVrms tout en consommant seulement 53,9 μW. Le potentiostat proposé est dédié aux dispositifs implantables à faible consommation de puissance et à sensibilité et linéarité élevées.In this thesis, we present different discrete and integrated electrochemical biosensors. All these designed potentiostats are based on fully-differential architecture to enhance sensitivity and accuracy. Two complete single channel and four-channel discrete designs were fabricated. The single channel discrete design imaged the dopamine neurotransmitter with the sensed current of approximately low nano-ampere and power consumption of 120 mW implemented on a 20 x 35 mm PCB. The four-channel discrete design was the improved version of previous one in terms of area, sensitivity and power consumption. The 15 x 15 mm PCB was able to measure the reduction-oxydation currents in the range of high pico-ampere while consuming 60 mW. The advantage of the multichannel architecture is to provide a system with different sensitivity going from pA to mA for each channel. A microfluidic 7.5 x 5 mm chamber with two inlets and one outlet was bonded to the PCB. A phosphate buffered saline (PBS) with ferrocyanide solution was used to test the functionality of the implemented system. Cyclic voltammetry has been used as a detection technique. A linear behavior had been observed when the neurotransmitter concentration changed. An integrated CMOS potentiostat was designed and fabricated in 180 nm technology based on a fully-differential-difference architecture for a low power consumption and also high sensitivity system. This new architecture was designed in order to sense ultra-low concentration of neurotransmitters with low noise and high dynamic range. This integrated design was able to image currents in the range of sub-pA with low input-referred noise of 6.9 µVrms while consuming only 53.9 µW. The proposed potentiostat is dedicated for implantable devices with low power consumption and high sensitivity and linearity

    Carbon Nanomaterials Embedded in Conductive Polymers: A State of the Art

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    Carbon nanomaterials are at the forefront of the newest technologies of the third millennium, and together with conductive polymers, represent a vast area of indispensable knowledge for developing the devices of tomorrow. This review focusses on the most recent advances in the field of conductive nanotechnology, which combines the properties of carbon nanomaterials with conjugated polymers. Hybrid materials resulting from the embedding of carbon nanotubes, carbon dots and graphene derivatives are taken into consideration and fully explored, with discussion of the most recent literature. An introduction into the three most widely used conductive polymers and a final section about the most recent biological results obtained using carbon nanotube hybrids will complete this overview of these innovative and beyond belief materials.The European Union is acknowledged for funding this research through Horizon 2020 MSCA-IF-2018 No 838171 (TEXTHIOL). IMDEA Nanociencia acknowledges support from the “Severo Ochoa” Programme for Centres of Excellence in R&D (MINECO, Grant SEV- 2016-0686). European Regional Development fund Project “MSCAfellow4 @ MUNI” supported by MEYS CR (No. CZ.02.2.69/0.0/0.0/20_079/0017045) is acknowledged. N.A. has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 753293, acronym NanoBEAT

    A fully integrated CMOS microelectrode system for electrochemistry

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    Electroanalysis has proven to be one of the most widely used technologies for point-of-care devices. Owing to the direct recording of the intrinsic properties of biochemical functions, the field has been involved in the study of biology since electrochemistry’s conception in the 1800’s. With the advent of microelectronics, humanity has welcomed self-monitoring portable devices such as the glucose sensor in its everyday routine. The sensitivity of amperometry/ voltammetry has been enhanced by the use of microelectrodes. Their arrangement into microelectrode arrays (MEAs) took a step forward into sensing biomarkers, DNA and pathogens on a multitude of sites. Integrating these devices and their operating circuits on CMOS monolithically miniaturised these systems even more, improved the noise response and achieved parallel data collection. Including microfluidics on this type of devices has led to the birth of the Lab-on-a-Chip technology. Despite the technology’s inclusion in many bioanalytical instruments there is still room for enhancing its capabilities and application possibilities. Even though research has been conducted on the selective preparation of microelectrodes with different materials in a CMOS MEA to sense several biomarkers, limited effort has been demonstrated on improving the parallel electroanalytical capabilities of these devices. Living and chemical materials have a tendency to alter their composition over time. Therefore analysing a biochemical sample using as many electroanalytical methods as possible simultaneously could offer a more complete diagnostic snapshot. This thesis describes the development of a CMOS Lab-on-a-Chip device comprised of many electrochemical cells, capable of performing simultaneous amperometric/voltammetric measurements in the same fluidic chamber. The chip is named an electrochemical cell microarray (ECM) and it contains a MEA controlled by independent integrated potentiostats. The key stages in this work were: to investigate techniques for the electrochemical cell isolation through simulations; to design and implement a CMOS ECM ASIC; to prepare the CMOS chip for use in an electrochemical environment and encapsulate it to work with liquids; to test and characterise the CMOS chip housed in an experimental system; and to make parallel measurements by applying different simultaneous electroanalytical methods. It is envisaged that results from the system could be combined with multivariate analysis to describe a molecular profile rather than only concentration levels. Simulations to determine the microelectrode structure and the potentiostat design, capable of constructing isolated electrochemical cells, were made using the Cadence CAD software package. The electrochemical environment and the microelectrode structure were modelled using a netlist of resistors and capacitors. The netlist was introduced in Cadence and it was simulated with potentiostat designs to produce 3-D potential distribution and electric field intensity maps of the chemical volume. The combination of a coaxial microelectrode structure and a fully differential potentiostat was found to result in independent electrochemical cells isolated from each other. A 4 x 4 integrated ECM controlled by on-chip fully differential potentiostats and made up by a 16 × 16 working electrode MEA (laid out with the coaxial structure) was designed in an unmodified 0.35 μm CMOS process. The working electrodes were connected to a circuit capable of multiplexing them along a voltammetric measurement, maintaining their diffusion layers during stand-by time. Two readout methods were integrated, a simple resistor for an analogue readout and a discrete time digital current-to-frequency charge-sensitive amplifier. Working electrodes were designed with a 20 μm side length while the counter and reference electrodes had an 11 μm width. The microelectrodes were designed using the aluminium top metal layer of the CMOS process. The chips were received from the foundry unmodified and passivated, thus they were post-process fabricated with photolithographic processes. The passivation layer had to be thinned over the MEA and completely removed on top of the microelectrodes. The openings were made 25 % smaller than the top metal layer electrode size to ensure a full coverage of the easily corroded Al metal. Two batches of chips were prepared, one with biocompatible Au on all the microelectrodes and one altered with Pd on the counter and Ag on the reference electrode. The chips were packaged on ceramic pin grid array packages and encapsulated using chemically resistant materials. Electroplating was verified to deposit Au with increased roughness on the microelectrodes and a cleaning step was performed prior to electrochemical experiments. An experimental setup containing a PCB, a PXIe system by National Instruments, and software programs coded for use with the ECM was prepared. The programs were prepared to conduct various voltammetric and amperometric methods as well as to analyse the results. The first batch of post-processed encapsulated chips was used for characterisation and experimental measurements. The on-chip potentiostat was verified to perform alike a commercial potentiostat, tested with microelectrode samples prepared to mimic the coaxial structure of the ECM. The on-chip potentiostat’s fully differential design achieved a high 5.2 V potential window range for a CMOS device. An experiment was also devised and a 12.3 % cell-to-cell electrochemical cross-talk was found. The system was characterised with a 150 kHz bandwidth enabling fast-scan cyclic voltammetry(CV) experiments to be performed. A relatively high 1.39 nA limit-of-detection was recorded compared to other CMOS MEAs, which is however adequate for possible applications of the ECM. Due to lack of a current polarity output the digital current readout was only eligible for amperometric measurements, thus the analogue readout was used for the rest of the measurements. The capability of the ECM system to perform independent parallel electroanalytical measurements was demonstrated with 3 different experimental techniques. The first one was a new voltammetric technique made possible by the ECM’s unique characteristics. The technique was named multiplexed cyclic voltammetry and it increased the acquisition speed of a voltammogram by a parallel potential scan on all the electrochemical cells. The second technique measured a chemical solution with 5 mM of ferrocene with constant potential amperometry, staircase cyclic voltammetry, normal pulse voltammetry, and differential pulse voltammetry simultaneously on different electrochemical cells. Lastly, a chemical solution with 2 analytes (ferrocene and decamethylferrocene) was prepared and they were sensed separately with constant potential amperometry and staircase cyclic voltammetry on different cells. The potential settings of each electrochemical cell were adjusted to detect its respective analyte

    A CMOS Amperometric System for Multi-Neurotransmitter Detection

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    In vivo multi-target and selective concentration monitoring of neurotransmitters can help to unravel the brain chemical complex signaling interplay. This paper presents a dedicated integrated potentiostat transducer circuit and its selective electrode interface. A custom 2-electrode time-based potentiostat circuit was fabricated with 0.13 mu m CMOS technology and provides a wide dynamic input current range of 20 pA to 600 nA with 56 mu W, for a minimum sampling frequency of 1.25 kHz. A multi-working electrode chip is functionalized with carbon nanotubes (CNT)-based chemical coatings that offer high sensitivity and selectivity towards electroactive dopamine and non-electroactive glutamate. The prototype was experimentally tested with different concentrations levels of both neurotransmitter types, and results were similar to measurements with a commercially available potentiostat. This paper validates the functionality of the proposed biosensor, and demonstrates its potential for the selective detection of a large number of neurochemicals
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