Handheld Total Chemical and Biological Analysis Systems

Lieferzeit: Lieferbar innerhalb 14 Tagen

106,99 

Bridging NMR, Digital Microfluidics, and Semiconductors

ISBN: 331988493X
ISBN 13: 9783319884936
Verlag: Springer Verlag GmbH
Umfang: xxi, 102 S., 2 s/w Illustr., 61 farbige Illustr., 102 p. 63 illus., 61 illus. in color.
Erscheinungsdatum: 25.08.2018
Weitere Autoren: Lei, Ka-Meng/Mak, Pui-In/Law, Man-Kay et al
Auflage: 1/2018
Produktform: Kartoniert
Einband: KT

The book Handheld Total Chemical and Biological Analysis Systems: Bridging NMR, Digital Microfluidics, and Semiconductorscenters on the complete design of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) microsystems for in vitro chemical and biological assays based on semiconductor chips and portable magnet. Different sensing mechanisms for CMOS in vitro assay are compared, key design criteria of the CMOS transceiver for NMR measurement are revealed, and system-level optimizations of the CMOS NMR platform utilizing digital microfluidic and diverse functions of the CMOS technology are discussed. Two CMOS NMR platforms are implemented, each of these focuses on different aspect of optimization. Shows literature review about stateoftheart CMOS in vitro diagnosis systems and their sensing mechanisms; Shows brief physics background on biological sensing with NMR; Shows detailed design of the CMOS transceiver for NMR experiments; Describes the first CMOS NMR platform integrated with digital microfluidic devices for electronicautomated sample management; Demonstrates magnetic field stabilization for the portable magnet to enhance the robustness of the NMR platform with the aid of CMOS vertical Hall sensor.

Artikelnummer: 6775844 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

The book Handheld Total Chemical and Biological Analysis Systems: Bridging NMR, Digital Microfluidics, and Semiconductors centers on the complete design of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) microsystems for in vitro chemical and biological assays based on semiconductor chips and portable magnet. Different sensing mechanisms for CMOS in vitro assay are compared, key design criteria of the CMOS transceiver for NMR measurement are revealed, and system-level optimizations of the CMOS NMR platform utilizing digital microfluidic and diverse functions of the CMOS technology are discussed. Two CMOS NMR platforms are implemented, each of these focuses on different aspect of optimization.

Autorenporträt

Ka-Meng Lei (S'12-M'17) received the B.Sc. degree in electrical and electronics engineering, and graduated from Honours College from University of Macau (UM), Macao in 2012. He completed his Ph.D. degree in the State-Key Laboratory of Analog and Mixed-Signal VLSI (SKL-AMSV) and Faculty of Science and Technology - ECE, UM in 2016. He is currently working as a lecturer in the same laboratory under the "Macao Fellow" program at UM. Since Jun. 2017, he has been a postdoctoral fellow (visiting) at Harvard University, John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.   Dr. Lei worked as a trainee at Evatronix IP, Gliwice, Poland in the summer of 2012. He was a research assistant in SKL-AMSV to work on CMOS micro-NMR biosensor, and will continue the development of it with the Harvard University.He has published 13 referred papers (6 in scientific journals & 7 in conference proceedings) as well as 2 US patents. His research interests include sensors and analog front-end interfaces, analog circuit techniques for micro-NMR, intelligent digital microfluidics platform, and multidisciplinary design of biomedical devices.   Dr. Lei (co-)received the Chipidea Microelectronics Prize (Bachelor level) 2012; Best Paper Award in Asia Symposium on Quality Electronic Design 2013; Student/Young Researcher Grant from The Chemical and Biological Microsystems Society 2015; Distinguished Design Award of the Student Design Contest in IEEE Asian Solid-State Circuits Conference 2015; Silkroad Award in IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference 2016; and the IEEE Solid-State Society Predoctoral Achievement Award in 2017.   Pui-In Mak (Elvis) (S'00-M'08-SM'11) received the B.Sc. ('03) and Ph.D. ('06) degrees from the University of Macau (UM), where he is currently Full Professor at the Faculty of Science and Technology - ECE; Associate Director (Research) and Research Line Coordinator (Wireless and Biomedical) at the State-Key Laboratory of Analog and Mixed-Signal VLSI.He held a visiting position at the University of Cambridge, UK ('09), INESC-ID, Portugal ('09) and University of Pavia, Italy ('10). His research focuses are on circuits and systems for wireless and multidisciplinary innovations.   Prof. Mak has published 90+ journal and 120+ conference papers, and holds 20+ US patents (issued/filed). He co-authored a number of books/book chapters: Analog-Baseband Architectures and Circuits for Multistandard and Low-Voltage Wireless Transceivers (Springer'07), High-/Mixed-Voltage Analog and RF Circuit Techniques for Nanoscale CMOS (Springer'12) and Ultra-Low-Power and Ultra-Low-Cost Short-Range Wireless Receivers in Nanoscale CMOS (Springer'16), and Enabling the Internet of Things - from Integrated Circuits to Integrated Systems (Springer'17). He is/was the Editorial Board Member of IEEE Press ('14-'16); Senior/Guest Editor of IEEE Journal on Emerging and Selected Topics in Circuits and Systems ('14-'15, '17); Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I ('10-'11, '14-'15), IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems II ('10-'11, 12'-'13), IEEE CASS Newsletter ('10-), IEEE Potentials ('12-'14), and Elsevier the VLSI Journal - Integration (16'-); Guest Editor of IEEE RFIC Virtual Journal ('14) and IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits ('18).   He is/was the Distinguished Lecturer of IEEE Circuits and Systems Society ('14-'15) and IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society ('17-'18). He is/was with the Board-of-Governor ('09-'11) of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society (CASS), and its Publication Committee ('09-'11), CASCOM ('08-) and CASEO ('09-) Technical Committees. He was the TPC Vice Chair of ASP-DAC (

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