433 research outputs found

    Design of a single-chip pH sensor using a conventional 0.6-μm CMOS process

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    A pH sensor fabricated on a single chip by an unmodified, commercial 0.6-/spl μm CMOS process is presented. The sensor comprises a circuit for making differential measurements between an ion-sensitive field-effect transistor (ISFET) and a reference FET (REFET). The ISFET has a floating-gate structure and uses the silicon nitride passivation layer as a pH-sensitive insulator. As fabricated, it has a large threshold voltage that is postulated to be caused by a trapped charge on the floating gate. Ultraviolet radiation and bulk-substrate biasing is used to permanently modify the threshold voltage so that the ISFET can be used in a battery-operated circuit. A novel post-processing method using a single layer of photoresist is used to define the sensing areas and to provide robust encapsulation for the chip. The complete circuit, operating from a single 3-V supply, provides an output voltage proportional to pH and can be powered down when not required

    A system-on-chip digital pH meter for use in a wireless diagnostic capsule

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    This paper describes the design and implementation of a system-on-chip digital pH meter, for use in a wireless capsule application. The system is organized around an 8-bit microcontroller, designed to be functionally identical to the Motorola 6805. The analog subsystem contains a floating-electrode ISFET, which is fully compatible with a commercial CMOS process. On-chip programmable voltage references and multiplexors permit flexibility with the minimum of external connections. The chip is designed in a modular fashion to facilitate verification and component re-use. The single-chip pH meter can be directly connected to a personal computer, and gives a response of 37 bits/pH, within an operating range of 7 pH units

    Chemical Current-Conveyor: a new approach in biochemical computation

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    Biochemical sensors that are low cost, small in size and compatible with integrated circuit technology play an essential part in the drive towards personalised healthcare and the research described in this thesis is concerned with this area of medical instrumentation. A new biochemical measurement system able to sense key properties of biochemical fluids is presented. This new integrated circuit biochemical sensor, called the Chemical Current-Conveyor, uses the ion sensitive field effect transistor as the input sensor combined with the current-conveyor, an analog building-block, to produce a range of measurement systems. The concept of the Chemical Current-Conveyor is presented together with the design and subsequent fabrication of a demonstrator integrated circuit built on conventional 0.35μm CMOS silicon technology. The silicon area of the Chemical Current-Conveyor is (92μm x 172μm) for the N-channel version and (99μm x 165μm) for the P-channel version. Power consumption for the N-channel version is 30μW and 43μW for the P-channel version with a full load of 1MΩ. The maximum sensitivity achieved for pH measurement was 46mV per pH. The potential of the Chemical Current Conveyor as a versatile biochemical integrated circuit, able to produce output information in an appropriate form for direct clinical use has been confirmed by applications including measurement of (i) pH, (ii) buffer index ( ), (iii) urea, (iv) creatinine and (v) urea:creatinine ratio. In all five cases the device has been demonstrated successfully, confirming the validity of the original aim of this research project, namely to produce a versatile and flexible analog circuit for many biochemical measurement applications. Finally, the thesis closes with discussion of another potential application area for the Chemical Current Conveyor and the main contributions can be summarised by the design and development of the first: ISFET based current-conveyor biochemical sensor, called 'Chemical Current Conveyor, CCCII+' has been designed and developed. It is a general purpose biochemical analog building-block for several biochemical measurements. Real-time buffer capacity measurement system, based on the CCCII+, which exploits the imbedded analog computation capability of the CCCII+. Real-time enzyme based CCCII+ namely, Creatinine-CCCII+ and Urea-CCCII+ for real-time monitoring system of renal system. The system can provide outputs of 3 important parameters of the renal system, namely (i) urea concentration, (ii) creatinine concentration, and (ii) urea to creatinine ratio

    An Integrated Platform for Differential Electrochemical and ISFET Sensing

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    A fully-integrated differential biosensing platform on CMOS is presented for miniaturized enzyme-based electrochemical sensing. It enables sensor background current elimination and consists of a differential sensor array and a differential readout IC (DiRIC). The sensor array includes a four-electrode sensor for amperometric electrochemical sensing, as well as a differential ISFET-based pH sensor to calibrate the biosensors. The ISFET is biased in weak inversion and co-designed with DiRIC to enable pH measurements from 1 to 14 with resolution of 0.1 pH. DiRIC enables differential current measurement in the range of ¿¿100 ¿¿A with more than 120dB dynamic range

    A Flexible, Highly Integrated, Low Power pH Readout

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    Medical devices are widely employed in everyday life as wearable and implantable technologies make more and more technological breakthroughs. Implantable biosensors can be implanted into the human body for monitoring of relevant physiological parameters, such as pH value, glucose, lactate, CO2 [carbon dioxide], etc. For these applications the implantable unit needs a whole functional set of blocks such as micro- or nano-sensors, sensor signal processing and data generation units, wireless data transmitters etc., which require a well-designed implantable unit.Microelectronics technology with biosensors has caused more and more interest from both academic and industrial areas. With the advancement of microelectronics and microfabrication, it makes possible to fabricate a complete solution on an integrated chip with miniaturized size and low power consumption.This work presents a monolithic pH measurement system with power conditioning system for supply power derived from harvested energy. The proposed system includes a low-power, high linearity pH readout circuits with wide pH values (0-14) and a power conditioning unit based on low drop-out (LDO) voltage regulator. The readout circuit provides square-wave output with frequency being highly linear corresponding to the input pH values. To overcome the process variations, a simple calibration method is employed in the design which makes the output frequency stay constant over process, supply voltage and temperature variations. The prototype circuit is designed and fabricated in a standard 0.13-μm [micro-meter] CMOS process and shows good linearity to cover the entire pH value range from 0-14 while the voltage regulator provides a stable supply voltage for the system

    Robust low power CMOS methodologies for ISFETs instrumentation

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    I have developed a robust design methodology in a 0.18 [Mu]m commercial CMOS process to circumvent the performance issues of the integrated Ions Sensitive Field Effect Transistor (ISFET) for pH detection. In circuit design, I have developed frequency domain signal processing, which transforms pH information into a frequency modulated signal. The frequency modulated signal is subsequently digitized and encoded into a bit-stream of data. The architecture of the instrumentation system consists of a) A novel front-end averaging amplifier to interface an array of ISFETs for converting pH into a voltage signal, b) A high linear voltage controlled oscillator for converting the voltage signal into a frequency modulated signal, and c) Digital gates for digitizing and differentiating the frequency modulated signal into an output bit-stream. The output bit stream is indistinguishable to a 1st order sigma delta modulation, whose noise floor is shaped by +20dB/decade. The fabricated instrumentation system has a dimension of 1565 [Mu] m 1565 [Mu] m. The chip responds linearly to the pH in a chemical solution and produces a digital output, with up to an 8-bit accuracy. Most importantly, the fabricated chips do not need any post-CMOS processing for neutralizing any trapped-charged effect, which can modulate on-chip ISFETs’ threshold voltages into atypical values. As compared to other ISFET-related works in the literature, the instrumentation system proposed in this thesis can cope with the mismatched ISFETs on chip for analogue-to-digital conversions. The design methodology is thus very accurate and robust for chemical sensing

    Wearable, low-power CMOS ISFETs and compensation circuits for on-body sweat analysis

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    Complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology has been a key driver behind the trend of reduced power consumption and increased integration of electronics in consumer devices and sensors. In the late 1990s, the integration of ion-sensitive field-effect transistors (ISFETs) into unmodified CMOS helped to create advancements in lab-on-chip technology through highly parallelised and low-cost designs. Using CMOS techniques to reduce power and size in chemical sensing applications has already aided the realisation of portable, battery-powered analysis platforms, however the possibility of integrating these sensors into wearable devices has until recently remained unexplored. This thesis investigates the use of CMOS ISFETs as wearable electrochemical sensors, specifically for on-body sweat analysis. The investigation begins by evaluating the ISFET sensor for wearable applications, identifying the key advantages and challenges that arise in this pursuit. A key requirement for wearable devices is a low power consumption, to enable a suitable operational life and small form factor. From this perspective, ISFETs are investigated for low power operation, to determine the limitations when trying to push down the consumption of individual sensors. Batteryless ISFET operation is explored through the design and implementation of a 0.35 \si{\micro\metre} CMOS ISFET sensing array, operating in weak-inversion and consuming 6 \si{\micro\watt}. Using this application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), the first ISFET array powered by body heat is demonstrated and the feasibility of using near-field communication (NFC) for wireless powering and data transfer is shown. The thesis also presents circuits and systems for combatting three key non-ideal effects experienced by CMOS ISFETs, namely temperature variation, threshold voltage offset and drift. An improvement in temperature sensitivity by a factor of three compared to an uncompensated design is shown through measured results, while adding less than 70 \si{\nano\watt} to the design. A method of automatically biasing the sensors is presented and an approach to using spatial separation of sensors in arrays in applications with flowing fluids is proposed for distinguishing between signal and sensor drift. A wearable device using the ISFET-based system is designed and tested with both artificial and natural sweat, identifying the remaining challenges that exist with both the sensors themselves and accompanying components such as microfluidics and reference electrode. A new ASIC is designed based on the discoveries of this work and aimed at detecting multiple analytes on a single chip. %Removed In the latter half of the thesis, Finally, the future directions of wearable electrochemical sensors is discussed with a look towards embedded machine learning to aid the interpretation of complex fluid with time-domain sensor arrays. The contributions of this thesis aim to form a foundation for the use of ISFETs in wearable devices to enable non-invasive physiological monitoring.Open Acces

    Solid State Circuits Technologies

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    The evolution of solid-state circuit technology has a long history within a relatively short period of time. This technology has lead to the modern information society that connects us and tools, a large market, and many types of products and applications. The solid-state circuit technology continuously evolves via breakthroughs and improvements every year. This book is devoted to review and present novel approaches for some of the main issues involved in this exciting and vigorous technology. The book is composed of 22 chapters, written by authors coming from 30 different institutions located in 12 different countries throughout the Americas, Asia and Europe. Thus, reflecting the wide international contribution to the book. The broad range of subjects presented in the book offers a general overview of the main issues in modern solid-state circuit technology. Furthermore, the book offers an in depth analysis on specific subjects for specialists. We believe the book is of great scientific and educational value for many readers. I am profoundly indebted to the support provided by all of those involved in the work. First and foremost I would like to acknowledge and thank the authors who worked hard and generously agreed to share their results and knowledge. Second I would like to express my gratitude to the Intech team that invited me to edit the book and give me their full support and a fruitful experience while working together to combine this book

    Biosensors and CMOS Interface Circuits

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    abstract: Analysing and measuring of biological or biochemical processes are of utmost importance for medical, biological and biotechnological applications. Point of care diagnostic system, composing of biosensors, have promising applications for providing cheap, accurate and portable diagnosis. Owing to these expanding medical applications and advances made by semiconductor industry biosensors have seen a tremendous growth in the past few decades. Also emergence of microfluidics and non-invasive biosensing applications are other marker propellers. Analyzing biological signals using transducers is difficult due to the challenges in interfacing an electronic system to the biological environment. Detection limit, detection time, dynamic range, specificity to the analyte, sensitivity and reliability of these devices are some of the challenges in developing and integrating these devices. Significant amount of research in the field of biosensors has been focused on improving the design, fabrication process and their integration with microfluidics to address these challenges. This work presents new techniques, design and systems to improve the interface between the electronic system and the biological environment. This dissertation uses CMOS circuit design to improve the reliability of these devices. Also this work addresses the challenges in designing the electronic system used for processing the output of the transducer, which converts biological signal into electronic signal.Dissertation/ThesisM.S. Electrical Engineering 201
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