Title :
CMOS Tunable-Wavelength Multi-Color Photogate Sensor
Author :
Ho, D. ; Noor, M. Omair ; Krull, Ulrich J. ; Gulak, Glenn ; Genov, Roman
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Abstract :
A CMOS tunable-wavelength multi-color photogate (CPG) sensor is presented. Sensing of a small set of well-separated wavelengths (e.g., >50 nm apart) is achieved by tuning the spectral response of the device with a bias voltage. The CPG employs the polysilicon gate as an optical filter, which eliminates the need for an external color filter. A prototype has been fabricated in a standard 0.35 μm digital CMOS technology and demonstrates intensity measurements of blue (450 nm), green (520 nm), and red (620 nm) illumination with peak signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) of 34.7 dB , 29.2 dB, and 34.8 dB, respectively. The prototype is applied to fluorescence detection of green-emitting quantum dots (gQDs) and red-emitting quantum dots (rQDs). It spectrally differentiates among multiple emission bands, effectively implementing on-chip emission filtering. The prototype demonstrates single-color measurements of gQD and rQD concentrations to a detection limit of 24 nM, and multi-color measurements of solutions containing both colors of QDs to a detection limit of 90 nM and 120 nM of gQD and rQD, respectively.
Keywords :
CMOS image sensors; bioMEMS; biomedical optical imaging; chemical sensors; fluorescence; microsensors; optical filters; optical tuning; quantum dots; CMOS tunable-wavelength multicolor photogate sensor; CPG; QD colors; SNR; bias voltage; detection limit; device spectral response tuning; external color filter; fluorescence detection; gQD concentrations; green-emitting quantum dots; illumination; intensity measurements; multicolor measurements; multiple emission bands; noise figure 29.2 dB; noise figure 34.7 dB; noise figure 34.8 dB; on-chip emission filtering; optical filter; peak signal-to-noise ratios; polysilicon gate; prototype; rQD concentrations; red-emitting quantum dots; single-color measurements; size 0.35 mum; standard digital CMOS technology; wavelength 450 nm; wavelength 520 nm; wavelength 620 nm; Biomedical image processing; CMOS image sensors; Fluorescence; Image sensors; Multiplexing; Quantum dots; Spectral analysis; CMOS image sensor; contact imaging; fluorescence; microsystem; quantum dots; spectral-multiplexing;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2013.2243727