Claims
- 1. A dynamically configurable electrode comprising:
a first planar electrode; and
a planar array of pixels in a different plane, said pixels individually addressable by a time-varying voltage, adjacent pixels receiving, at any instant in time, either the same voltage waveform or a different voltage waveform such that adjacent pixels receiving different voltage waveforms initiate movement of dipolar entities parallel to the planar array, wherein the dipolar entities reside in a polarizable liquid medium and can include dipolar molecules, ions, cells or polarized particles; and wherein said polarizable liquid medium resides adjacent said insulator and between the electrodes.
- 2. The electrode of claim 1 wherein, in general, the nearer the dipolar entities are to the interface of the insulator and the polarizable liquid medium, the greater the movement.
- 3. The electrode of claim 1 wherein the planar array is divided into pixel regions, and contiguous pixels within a region can receive the same voltage waveform at a given time.
- 4. The electrode of claim 1 wherein the relative magnitude of the waveforms determines the direction of motion of the polarizable medium.
- 5. The electrode of claim 1 wherein the first planar electrode provides a reference voltage to the array of a magnitude such that dipolar entities in the medium are forced adjacent to the array surface.
- 6. A programmable dynamically configurable substantially planar electrode for generating movement of dipolar entities (including dipolar molecules, ions, cells and particles) in a polarizable medium, parallel to the planar electrode, comprising:
a first planar electrode;
a planar array of pixels in a different plane, said pixels individually addressable by a time-varying voltage, adjacent pixels receiving, at any instant in time, either the same voltage waveform or a different voltage waveform such that adjacent pixels receiving different voltage waveforms generate said movement; the polarizable liquid medium being suspended between the electrode and the pixels; and a computer and user interface for controlling the addressing of and the voltage waveforms received by the pixels.
- 7. The electrode of claim 6 wherein the planar array is divided into pixel regions, and contiguous pixels within a region can receive the same voltage waveform at a given time, and a user can control region contours to form any of a variety of flow patterns on the planar electrode.
- 8. The electrode of claim 6 wherein, in general, the nearer the dipolar entities are to the interface of the insulator and the polarizable liquid medium, the greater the movement.
- 9. The electrode of claim 6 wherein the relative magnitude of the waveforms determines the direction of motion of the polarizable medium.
- 10. The electrode of claim 6 wherein the first planar electrode provides a reference voltage to the array of a magnitude such that dipolar entities in the medium are forced adjacent to the array surface.
- 11. A method of dynamically reconfiguring an electrode formed by a planar array of pixels connected to a control circuit, the method comprising:
(i) supplying a designated voltage to each column line in the array; (ii) applying a gate voltage to activate switches associated with each pixel in a row; (iii) repeating steps (i) and (ii) for each row such that the array is scanned at a frequency which minimizes the loss of charge by each pixel between successive activation cycles.
- 12. The method of claim 11 wherein the scanning frequency is such that when a polarizable liquid medium is positioned adjacent the electrode, dipolar entities in said medium can be moved parallel to the planar array by a pseudo-waveform generated by selective application of the designated voltage to particular pixels.
- 13. The method of claim 11 wherein, in general, the nearer the dipolar entities are to the interface of the insulator and the polarizable liquid medium, the greater the movement.
- 14. The method of claim 11 wherein the relative magnitude of the waveforms determines the direction of motion of the polarizable medium.
- 15. The method of claim 12 wherein the reconfiguring of the electrode and the movement of the dipolar entities is controlled in a continuous manner.
- 16. The method of claim 15 wherein a pseudo waveform is used to effect the control.
- 17. An integrated microelectrode device representing a dynamically reconfigurable electrode, the device comprising:
an electrically insulated addressable pixel array near one surface, said pixels each connected to a control circuit by interconnects that are insulated and which extend through the device and are connected to a driving circuit at the opposite surface of the device.
- 18. The device of claim 17 wherein an insulation layer for the pixel array is a high ∈ material.
- 19. The device of claim 18 wherein the insulation layer is Ta2O5.
- 20. The device of claim 19 wherein the insulation layer covers the entire surface.
- 22. The device of claim 17 wherein the insulation layer is of a thickness such that its capacitance per unit area is about same order of magnitude as that of an electrolyte double layer of an electrolyte solution placed adjacent the layer.
- 23. The device of claim 17 wherein the insulation layer is of a thickness such that its capacitance per unit area is greater than that of an electrolyte double layer of an electrolyte solution placed adjacent the layer.
- 24. A controlled activation microelectrode structure comprising:
a plurality of substantially planar microelectrodes supported on a first dielectric layer; a second dielectric layer separated from the first dielectric layer by a shielding layer composed of a metal; switching transistors located outside the second dielectric layer and connecting with the microelectrodes through insulated interconnects which run through all three layers.
- 25. The microelectrode structure of claim 24 wherein the surface of the first dielectric layer and the microelectrodes is covered with a high e material.
- 26. The microelectrode structure of claim 25 wherein the material is Ta2O5.
- 27. The microelectrode structure of claim 26 wherein the material covers the entire surface.
- 28. The microelectrode structure of claim 25 wherein the material is of a thickness such that its capacitance per unit area is about same order of magnitude as that of an electrolyte double layer of an electrolyte solution placed adjacent the layer.
- 29. The microelectrode structure of claim 24 wherein the material is of a thickness such that its capacitance per unit area is greater than that of an electrolyte double layer of an electrolyte solution placed adjacent the layer surface layer of Ta2O5.
- 30. A method for computing the current distribution produced in response to a voltage ramp at the interface between a dielectric film and in the region of the lateral gap between two electrodes, where each electrode includes pixels or contiguous groups of pixels operating at the same voltage, comprising:
using the Luminous and S-PISCES modules in an ATLAS simulator (from Silvaco, MA), to perform the simulation.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority to US Provisional Application Serial No. 60/448706, filed Feb. 19, 2003.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60448706 |
Feb 2003 |
US |