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Amperometric instrumentation system with on-chip electrode array for biosensor application | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Amperometric instrumentation system with on-chip electrode array for biosensor application


Abstract:

An integrated amperometric instrumentation system with on-chip electrodes for biosensor arrays is presented. The mixed-signal integrated circuit supports a variety of ele...Show More

Abstract:

An integrated amperometric instrumentation system with on-chip electrodes for biosensor arrays is presented. The mixed-signal integrated circuit supports a variety of electrochemical measurement techniques including linear sweep, constant potential, cyclic and pulse voltammetry. Implemented in 0.5 μm CMOS, the 3×3 mm2 chip dissipates 22.5 mW for a 200 kHz clock. The highly programmable chip provides a wide range of user-controlled rate and amplitude parameters with a maximum scan range of 2 V and scan rate ranging between 1mV/sec to 400V/sec. The amperometric readout circuit provides ± 0.5 pA linear resolution and supports inputs up to 100μA. A 2×2 array gold electrode electrochemical cells was fabricated on the surface of the CMOS instrumentation chip. An all-parylene packaging scheme was developed for compatibility with liquid test environments as well as harsh piranha electrode cleaning processes. The chip was tested using cyclic voltammetry of 0.1M potassium ferrocyanide, and results were comparable to measurements using commercial instruments.
Date of Conference: 03-05 November 2010
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 04 February 2011
ISBN Information:
Print ISSN: 2163-4025
Conference Location: Paphos, Cyprus
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I. Introduction

Analyte detection and quantification in bio/chemical solutions plays a major role in a variety of applications, especially in health care, environmental monitoring, industrial quality control and clinical investigation [1]. Because of their required sensitivity and critical importance in daily lives, these applications require robust, easy to use, efficient, and highly accurate instrumentation systems. With recent advances in CMOS technology, there is a great opportunity to develop lab-on-chip solutions to replace large bulky lab instruments with simple low power portable systems. The compatibility between many bio/chemical sensor materials and CMOS technology makes Si-based on-chip solutions very good candidates [2].

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