4,596 research outputs found
A handheld high-sensitivity micro-NMR CMOS platform with B-field stabilization for multi-type biological/chemical assays
We report a micro-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) system compatible with multi-type biological/chemical lab-on-a-chip assays. Unified in a handheld scale (dimension: 14 x 6 x 11 cm³, weight: 1.4 kg), the system is capable to detect<100 pM of Enterococcus faecalis derived DNA from a 2.5 μL sample. The key components are a portable magnet (0.46 T, 1.25 kg) for nucleus magnetization, a system PCB for I/O interface, an FPGA for system control, a current driver for trimming the magnetic (B) field, and a silicon chip fabricated in 0.18 μm CMOS. The latter, integrated with a current-mode vertical Hall sensor and a low-noise readout circuit, facilitates closed-loop B-field stabilization (2 mT → 0.15 mT), which otherwise fluctuates with temperature or sample displacement. Together with a dynamic-B-field transceiver with a planar coil for micro-NMR assay and thermal control, the system demonstrates: 1) selective biological target pinpointing; 2) protein state analysis; and 3) solvent-polymer dynamics, suitable for healthcare, food and colloidal applications, respectively. Compared to a commercial NMR-assay product (Bruker mq-20), this platform greatly reduces the sample consumption (120x), hardware volume (175x), and weight (96x)
A 16 x 16 CMOS amperometric microelectrode array for simultaneous electrochemical measurements
There is a requirement for an electrochemical sensor technology capable of making multivariate measurements in environmental, healthcare, and manufacturing applications. Here, we present a new device that is highly parallelized with an excellent bandwidth. For the first time, electrochemical cross-talk for a chip-based sensor is defined and characterized. The new CMOS electrochemical sensor chip is capable of simultaneously taking multiple, independent electroanalytical measurements. The chip is structured as an electrochemical cell microarray, comprised of a microelectrode array connected to embedded self-contained potentiostats. Speed and sensitivity are essential in dynamic variable electrochemical systems. Owing to the parallel function of the system, rapid data collection is possible while maintaining an appropriately low-scan rate. By performing multiple, simultaneous cyclic voltammetry scans in each of the electrochemical cells on the chip surface, we are able to show (with a cell-to-cell pitch of 456 μm) that the signal cross-talk is only 12% between nearest neighbors in a ferrocene rich solution. The system opens up the possibility to use multiple independently controlled electrochemical sensors on a single chip for applications in DNA sensing, medical diagnostics, environmental sensing, the food industry, neuronal sensing, and drug discovery
A Fully Differential CMOS Potentiostat
A CMOS potentiostat for chemical sensing in a
noisy environment is presented. The potentiostat measures bidirectional
electrochemical redox currents proportional to the
concentration of a chemical down to pico-ampere range. The fully
differential architecture with differential recording electrodes
suppresses the common mode interference. A 200μm×200μm
prototype was fabricated in a standard 0.35μm standard CMOS
technology and yields a 70dB dynamic range. The in-channel
analog-to-digital converter (ADC) performs 16-bit current-tofrequency
quantization. The integrated potentiostat functionality
is validated in electrical and electrochemical experiments
A 64-channel, 1.1-pA-accurate on-chip potentiostat for parallel electrochemical monitoring
Electrochemical monitoring is crucial for both industrial applications, such as microbial electrolysis and corrosion monitoring as well as consumer applications such as personal health monitoring. Yet, state-of-the-art integrated potentiostat monitoring devices have few parallel channels with limited flexibility due to their channel architecture. This work presents a novel, widely scalable channel architecture using a switch capacitor based Howland current pump and a digital potential controller. An integrated, 64-channel CMOS potentiostat array has been fabricated. Each individual channel has a dynamic current range of 120dB with 1.1pA precision with up to 100kHz bandwidth. The on-chip working electrodes are post-processed with gold to ensure (bio)electrochemical compatibility
A Radiation Imaging Detector Made by Postprocessing a Standard CMOS Chip
An unpackaged microchip is used as the sensing element in a miniaturized gaseous proportional chamber. Thisletter reports on the fabrication and performance of a complete radiation imaging detector based on this principle. Our fabrication schemes are based on wafer-scale and chip-scale postprocessing.\ud
Compared to hybrid-assembled gaseous detectors, our microsystem shows superior alignment precision and energy resolution, and offers the capability to unambiguously reconstruct 3-D radiation tracks on the spot.\u
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