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IEEE Trans Biomed Circuits Syst ; 9(5): 607-19, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26561481

ABSTRACT

The development of two new types of high-density, electroless plated microelectrode arrays for CMOS-based high-sensitivity direct bacteria and HeLa cell counting are presented. For emerging high-sensitivity direct pathogen counting, two technical challenges must be addressed. One is the formation of a bacteria-sized microelectrode, and the other is the development of a high-sensitivity and high-speed amperometry circuit. The requirement for microelectrode formation is that the gold microelectrodes are required to be as small as the target cell. By improving a self-aligned electroless plating technique, the dimensions of the microelectrodes on a CMOS sensor chip in this work were successfully reduced to 1.2 µm × 2.05 µm. This is 1/20th of the smallest size reported in the literature. Since a bacteria-sized microelectrode has a severe limitation on the current flow, the amperometry circuit has to have a high sensitivity and high speed with low noise. In this work, a current buffer was inserted to mitigate the potential fluctuation. Three test chips were fabricated using a 0.6- µm CMOS process: two with 1.2 µm × 2.05 µm (1024 × 1024 and 4 × 4) sensor arrays and one with 6- µm square (16 × 16) sensor arrays; and the microelectrodes were formed on them using electroless plating. The uniformity among the 1024 × 1024 electrodes arranged with a pitch of 3.6 µm × 4.45 µm was optically verified. For improving sensitivity, the trenches on each microelectrode were developed and verified optically and electrochemically for the first time. Higher sensitivity can be achieved by introducing a trench structure than by using a conventional microelectrode formed by contact photolithography. Cyclic voltammetry (CV) measurements obtained using the 1.2 µm × 2.05 µm 4 × 4 and 6- µm square 16 × 16 sensor array with electroless-plated microelectrodes successfully demonstrated direct counting of the bacteria-sized microbeads and HeLa cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Count/instrumentation , Microarray Analysis/instrumentation , Semiconductors , Bacteria , Biomedical Engineering/instrumentation , Equipment Design , HeLa Cells , Humans , Microelectrodes , Point-of-Care Systems
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