Title :
A Small-Area Low-Power Current Readout Circuit Using Two-Stage Conversion Method for 64-Channel CNT Sensor Arrays
Author :
Young-San Shin ; Seongsoo Lee ; Jae-Kyung Wee ; Inchae Song
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electron. Eng., Soongsil Univ., Seoul, South Korea
Abstract :
In this paper, a small-area and low-power current readout circuit with a novel two-stage conversion method is presented for 64-channel CNT (carbon nanotube) sensor arrays. In the first stage, current of each CNT sensor is amplified by 64 active input current mirrors (AICMs). In the second stage, the amplified current is converted to a voltage level through the shared variable gain amplifier (S-VGA). Then the S-VGA output is digitalized by successive approximation register analog-to-digital converter (SAR-ADC). The proposed readout circuit significantly reduces chip area and power consumption, since VGA is shared over 64 channels and passive elements are used only in S-VGA. Fabricated chip area is 0.173 mm2 in 0.13 μm CMOS technology. Measured power consumption and linearity error are 73.06 μW and 5.3%, respectively, at the input current range of 10 nA-10 μA and conversion rate of 640 samples/s. A prototype real-time CNT sensor system was implemented using the fabricated readout circuit, and successfully detected alcohol reaction.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; biomedical electronics; carbon nanotubes; chemical sensors; current mirrors; low-power electronics; nanofabrication; nanomedicine; nanosensors; organic compounds; readout electronics; 64-channel CNT sensor arrays; CMOS technology; S-VGA output; SAR-ADC; active input current mirrors; alcohol reaction detection; amplified current; carbon nanotube; chip area fabrication; conversion rate; current 10 nA to 10 muA; input current range; linearity error; passive elements; power 73.06 muW; power consumption; prototype real-time CNT sensor system; readout circuit fabrication; shared variable gain amplifier; size 0.13 mum; small-area low-power current readout circuit; successive approximation register analog-to-digital converter; two-stage conversion method; voltage level; Carbon nanotubes; Gain; Liquids; Mirrors; Resistors; Transistors; Analog-to-digital converter; carbon nanotube sensor; current readout circuit; low-power; two-stage conversion; Alcohols; Amplifiers, Electronic; Analog-Digital Conversion; Biocompatible Materials; Biosensing Techniques; Computer Simulation; Electric Conductivity; Electric Power Supplies; Equipment Design; Nanotubes, Carbon; Reproducibility of Results; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Silicon; Temperature; Time Factors;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2012.2212018