Title :
Simple MOSFET-based high-voltage nanosecond pulse circuit
Author :
Chaney, Alton ; Sundararajan, Raji
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Comput. Eng. Technol., Arizona State Univ. East, Mesa, AZ, USA
Abstract :
Using simple but powerful electronics concepts, such as a mass produced Schmitt trigger and integrated MOSFET driver in novel circuit applications, a simple 400-V 75-ns pulse generator (pulser) has been designed, developed, and tested. For a 50-Ω matched load, the pulser produces extremely well-defined, repetitive high-voltage pulses that are free from overshoot and ringing. The width of the pulses is adjustable from 75 ns to 10 ms with the fall times of a few tens of nanoseconds for a negative wave and a repetition period of 1.5 μs with the existing setup. By upgrading to a more complex driver circuit, much lower pulsewidths are possible. Using a 1-4 mm standard commercial cuvette, it is possible to generate electric fields of 4-1 kV/cm with this pulser. The purpose is to try to do electroporation mediated gene therapy on mammalian cells at higher electrical field strengths and submicrosecond or microsecond pulsewidths compared to conventional 200 V/cm and tens of millisecond-duration pulsewidths.
Keywords :
power MOSFET; power integrated circuits; pulse generators; pulsed power supplies; trigger circuits; 400 V; 50 ohm; 75 ns to 10 ms; MOSFET-based nanosecond pulse circuit; Schmitt trigger; commercial cuvette; driver circuit; electric field generation; electroporation mediated gene therapy; high-voltage nanosecond pulse circuit; high-voltage pulses; integrated MOSFET driver; mammalian cells; microsecond pulsewidths; millisecond-duration pulsewidth; pulse generator; submicrosecond pulsewidths; Circuit testing; Driver circuits; Electronic equipment testing; Gene therapy; MOSFET circuits; Power MOSFET; Pulse circuits; Pulse generation; Space vector pulse width modulation; Trigger circuits; High voltage; nanosecond pulse; power MOSFET; pulse generator; pulsed-power technology; rise time; transmission line;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPS.2004.835966