• DocumentCode
    2393464
  • Title

    Recent research and emerging challenges in the System-Level Design of digital microfluidic biochips

  • Author

    Pop, Paul ; Maftei, Elena ; Madsen, Jan

  • Author_Institution
    DTU Inf., Tech. Univ. of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    26-28 Sept. 2011
  • Firstpage
    6
  • Lastpage
    11
  • Abstract
    Microfluidic biochips are replacing the conventional biochemical analyzers, and are able to integrate on-chip all the basic functions for biochemical analysis. The “digital” biochips are manipulating liquids not as a continuous flow, but as discrete droplets on a two-dimensional array of electrodes. Basic microfluidic operations, such as mixing and dilution, are performed on the array, by routing the corresponding droplets on a series of electrodes. The challenges facing biochips are similar to those faced by microelectronics some decades ago. Computer-Aided Design tools for microfluidics are in their infancy, and designers are currently using manual, bottom-up design approaches to implement such biochips. Considering their architecture and the design tasks that have to be performed, the design of digital biochips has similarities to the high-level synthesis of integrated circuits. Motivated by this similarity, a few researchers have recently started to propose approaches for the top-down design of biochips. So far, they have assumed that operations are executing on virtual modules of rectangular shape, formed by grouping adjacent electrodes, and which have a fixed placement on the array. However, operations can actually execute by routing the droplets on any sequence of electrodes on the biochip. In this paper, we outline the original module-based synthesis problem, and then we present recent work which eliminates the concept of virtual modules and allows droplets to move on the chip on any route during operation execution. We discuss the advantages of such an approach, and identify the challenges and opportunities of system-level design of digital microfluidic biochips.
  • Keywords
    bioMEMS; biochemistry; biological fluid dynamics; biomedical electrodes; chemical sensors; control system CAD; flow control; integrated circuit design; lab-on-a-chip; medical control systems; microfluidics; 2D electrode array; biochemical analysis; bottom-up design approach; computer aided design tools; digital microfluidic biochip; dilution; discrete droplet; integrated circuit; lab-on-chip; microelectronics; microfluidic operation; mixing; module-based synthesis problem; system level design; top-down design; Adaptive arrays; Bismuth; Mixers; Plasmas;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    SOC Conference (SOCC), 2011 IEEE International
  • Conference_Location
    Taipei
  • ISSN
    2164-1676
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-1616-4
  • Electronic_ISBN
    2164-1676
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SOCC.2011.6085142
  • Filename
    6085142