Title: Distributed Microsystems Laboratory
1Distributed Microsystems Laboratory
Integrated Interface Circuits for Chemiresistor
Arrays Carina K. Leung and Denise Wilson,
Associate Professor Department of Electrical
Engineering University of Washington Now with
Intel, Dupont Washington
2Integrated Interface Circuits for Chemiresistor
Arrays
- Outline
- Project Description (High Density Chemiresistor
Arrays) - Chemiresistor Background
- Project Context
- Circuit Approach 1 Differential Measurement of
Resistance - Circuit Approach 2 Resistance-to-Frequency
Conversion - Comparison of Approaches
- Summary
- Acknowledgements
3Project Description
- Popular approach to chemical sensing
(traditional) - Small number (highly selective) sensors in an
- Application targeted to 1-2 analytes
- In an understood background
- Another approach to chemical sensing
(olfactory) - Large number (broad, overlapping selective)
sensors in an - Application targeted to many analytes
- And their (many) interferents
- In a cluttered and complicated background
- Candidates for high density arrays of chemical
sensors are few - Require small size, linear operation, broad
selectivity, compatibility with integration, and
room temperature operation
4Chemiresistor Background
- Composite polymer chemiresistors
- Conductive Element (such as carbon black)
combined with - Chemically sensitive element (polymer)
- Basic operation
- Polymer swells in response to target analytes
- Conductive particles move farther apart
(conductivity increases) - Linear response at low concentrations
- R-Ro Ro (k) C
- Ro baseline resistance (large and highly
variable) - C analyte concentration
- Superposition can be applied to multiple analytes
presented simultaneously
5Project Context
- High resolution Sensor Arrays
- Require Integration
- Circuits produced in CMOS
- Gold post-deposited electrochemically
- Sensor coating sprayed on gold
- 1-2 layers of metal required for sensor
- Challenge Design processing circuits that
- Ignore large, variable baseline resistance
- Amplify very small changes in polymer resistance
on top of large baselines - Conform to VLSI footprint that addresses
- Electrode Geometry
- Required sensor density
- Circuit performance
6Circuit Approach 1
- Differential Approach
- On-chip chemiresistor divided into
- One chemically sensitive resistor
- One or (three) reference resistors
- Passivated (responsive to zero analytes) or
- Exposed, not functionalized (responsive to all
analytes) - Resistive Bridge is part of sensor
- Remaining circuits are designed for maximum gain
under constrained footprint ( sensor platform)
7Circuit Approach 1
- Differential Approach
- Resistive Bridge output transferred to
- Differential Amplifier
- Comparator with ramping input for serial A/D
conversion - Design constraints
- Differential Amplifier maximum gain in small
footprint - Comparator fully serial (simple) A/D conversion
acceptable because of slow sensor response time
8Circuit Approach 1
- Differential Approach
- Circuit Gain
- 20 (Differential Amplifier)
- -20 (Comparator)
- Sensor Performance
- Bridge approach eliminates effect of broad range
in baseline on circuit gain - However, additional bias resistors add more noise
(electrical and transduction)
- Translation
- 25mV detection limit
- Independent of baseline
- 0.01 (DR) detection limit and resolution
9Circuit Approach 2
- Resistance to Frequency Conversion
- Sensor platform contains three terminals
- Outer ring terminals shorted together outside
sensor platform to enable circuits to fit
underneath - Allows a single resistor per platform for
chemical sensing - More active area (fill factor) than previous
approach. - Electrode geometry more readily optimized for
best noise performance.
10Circuit Approach 1
- Resistance to Frequency Conversion
- Operation
- Sensor resistance charges Co
- As the capacitor charges, it trips the Schmitt
trigger, causing the feedback to discharge the
capacitor - The frequency of the charge/discharge cycle
becomes smaller with increasing resistance
(smaller current) - Hysteresis reduces impact of noisy sensor response
11Circuit Approach 2
- Resistance to Frequency Conversion
- Sensitivity
- Baseline (730kW) .12/W
- Baseline (9.26kW) 4.1/W
- Resolution/Detection Limit
- Change in resistance from baseline
- Baseline (730kW) .07
- Baseline (9.26kW) .02
12Comparison
- Both circuits fit underneath sensor platform (.04
mm2 area) - Fill Factor
- Approach 1 25
- Approach 2 close to 100 (with exceptions for
metal routing) - Sensitivity
- Approach 1 400 (V/V)
- Approach 2 between .12/W and 4.1/W
- Resolution/Detection limit
- Approach 1 .01 change in resistance
- Approach 2 between .02 and .07
- Other
- Approach 2 more resilience to fluctuations in
response due to built in hysteresis.
13Summary
We have designed and fabricated two circuits for
processing the response of composite polymer
chemiresistors. Performance enables sub-ppm
detection of many common analytes, while having
having zero impact on sensor area.
14Acknowledgements
- The authors would like to thank Nathan Lewis and
his graduate group at the California Institute of
Technology for data and technical assistance, as
well as a subcontract through CalTech on ARO
Grant DAAG55-98-1-0266.