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Published December 2013 | public
Journal Article

Design and Implementation of an Integrated Magnetic Spectrometer for Multiplexed Biosensing

Abstract

Magnetic spectroscopy allows for characterization of the magnetic susceptibility of magnetic beads across a broad frequency range. This enables differentiation and quantification of multiple beads of varying types concurrently present in the active volume of a sensor's surface. A magnetic spectrometer can be used for multi-probe tagging and identification akin to multi-color fluorescent bio-sensing. We propose a new sensing methodology to perform magnetic spectroscopy and analyze various important design parameters such as SNR and gain uniformity. We present a proof-of-concept design of a fully integrated CMOS magnetic spectrometer that can detect, quantify, and characterize magnetic materials in the 1.1 GHz to 3.3 GHz frequency range, where we demonstrate magnetic multiplexing capability using a mixture of two different kinds of magnetic beads. The sensor consumes less than 2 mW of DC power within the whole frequency range, requires no external biasing magnetic fields, is implemented in a standard CMOS process, and can be powered and operated completely from a USB interface. The magnetic spectrometer not only increases the throughput and multiplexing of biosensing experiments for a given sensor area, but also can enable additional applications, such as magnetic flow cytometry and signal-collocation assays of multiple probes.

Additional Information

© 2014 IEEE. Manuscript received October 19, 2013; revised November 30, 2013; accepted December 08, 2013. Date of publication January 17, 2014; date of current version January 28, 2014. This work was supported in part by a National Science Foundation fellowship: DGE-1144469. This paper was recommended by Associate Editor S. Gambini. The authors would like to thank Prof. H. Wang and the members of the Caltech High-speed Integrated Circuits (CHIC) group for their helpful discussions. They would also like to thank Y. E. Wang for help with sample preparation, Dr. D. Belot of ST Microelectronics for technical support, ST Microelectronics for chip fabrication, and the anonymous reviewers for their constructive feedback.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 26, 2023