Title :
A Low Power Sub-
W Chemical Gilbert Cell for ISFET Differential Reaction Monitoring
Author :
Kalofonou, Melpomeni ; Toumazou, Christofer
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Imperial Coll. London, London, UK
Abstract :
This paper presents a low power current-mode method for monitoring differentially derived changes in pH from ion-sensitive field-effect transistor (ISFET) sensors, by adopting the Chemical Gilbert Cell. The fabricated system, with only a few transistors, achieves differential measurements and therefore drift minimisation of continuously recorded pH signals obtained from biochemical reactions such as DNA amplification in addition to combined gain tunability using only a single current. Experimental results are presented, demonstrating the capabilities of the front-end at a microscopic level through integration in a lab-on-chip (LoC) setup combining a microfluidic assembly, suitable for applications that require differential monitoring in small volumes, such as DNA detection where more than one gene needs to be studied. The system was designed and fabricated in a typical 0.35 μm CMOS process with the resulting topology achieving good differential pH sensitivity with a measured low power consumption of only 165 nW due to weak inversion operation. A tunable gain is demonstrated with results confirming 15.56 dB gain at 20 nA of ISFET bias current and drift reduction of up to 100 times compared to a single-ended measurement is also reported due to the differential current output, making it ideal for robust, low-power chemical measurement.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; DNA; bioMEMS; biochemistry; biomedical electronics; biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; chemical sensors; genetics; ion sensitive field effect transistors; lab-on-a-chip; low-power electronics; microfabrication; microfluidics; molecular biophysics; pH measurement; CMOS process; DNA amplification; DNA detection; ISFET bias current; ISFET differential reaction monitoring; LoC setup integration; biochemical reactions; continuously recorded pH signals; current 20 nA; differential current output; differential measurements; differential pH sensitivity; differential small volume monitoring; differentially derived pH change monitoring; drift minimisation; drift reduction; front-end capabilities; gain 15.56 dB; gain tunability; gene study; ion-sensitive field-effect transistor sensors; lab-on-chip; low power consumption; low power current-mode method; low power sub-μW chemical Gilbert cell; low-power chemical measurement; microfluidic assembly applications; microscopic level; power 165 nW; robust chemical measurement; single-ended measurement; system design; system fabrication; topology; transistors; tunable gain; weak inversion operation; Biomedical measurement; Chemicals; Current measurement; DNA; Logic gates; Sensors; Threshold voltage; Chemical Gilbert cell; drift reduction; gain tunability; ion-sensitive field-effect transistor (ISFET); lab-on-chip; low power;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2013.2282894