Title :
Defect-Aware High-Level Synthesis and Module Placement for Microfluidic Biochips
Author :
Tao Xu ; Chakrabarty, K. ; Fei Su
Author_Institution :
Duke Univ., Durham
fDate :
3/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Recent advances in microfluidics technology have led to the emergence of miniaturized biochip devices, also referred to as lab-on-a-chip, for biochemical analysis. A promising category of microfluidic biochips relies on the principle of electrowetting-on-dielectric, whereby discrete droplets of nanoliter volumes can be manipulated using an array of electrodes. As chemists adapt more bioassays for concurrent execution on such ldquodigitalrdquo droplet-based microfluidic platforms, system integration, design complexity, and the need for defect tolerance are expected to increase rapidly. Automated design tools for defect-tolerant and multifunctional biochips are important for the emerging marketplace, especially for low-cost, portable, and disposable devices for clinical diagnostics. We present a unified synthesis method that combines defect-tolerant architectural synthesis with defect-aware physical design. The proposed approach allows architectural-level design choices and defect-tolerant physical design decisions to be made simultaneously. We use a large-scale protein assay and the polymerase chain reaction procedure as case studies to evaluate the proposed synthesis method. We also carry out simulations based on defect injection to evaluate the robustness of the synthesized biochip designs.
Keywords :
bioMEMS; biochemistry; biomedical electronics; fault tolerant computing; high level synthesis; lab-on-a-chip; medical computing; microelectrodes; microfluidics; modules; molecular biophysics; parallel architectures; proteins; simulated annealing; automated design tools; biochemical analysis; clinical diagnostics; defect tolerance; defect-aware high-level synthesis; design complexity; digital droplet-based microfluidic platforms; electrode array; electrowetting-on-dielectric principle; lab-on-a-chip; large-scale protein assay; microfluidic biochips; microfluidics technology; miniaturized biochip devices; module placement; parallel recombinative simulated annealing; polymerase chain reaction procedure; system integration; Biochemical analysis; Chemical technology; Electrodes; High level synthesis; Lab-on-a-chip; Large-scale systems; Microfluidics; Polymers; Proteins; Robustness; Lab-on-a-chip; microfluidics;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2008.918283