The present invention is related to a micro-fluidic device including a two-dimensional array of a plurality of components for processing a fluid and/or for sensing properties of the fluid.
Micro-fluidic devices are at the heart of most biochip technologies, being used for both the preparation of fluidic samples and their subsequent analysis. The samples may e.g. be blood based. As will be appreciated by those in the art, the sample solution may comprise any number of things, including, but not limited to, bodily fluids like blood, urine, serum, lymph, saliva, anal and vaginal secretions, perspiration and semen of virtually any organism: Mammalian samples are preferred and human samples are particularly preferred; environmental samples (e.g. air, agricultural, water and soil samples); biological warfare agent samples; research samples (i.e. in the case of nucleic acids, the sample may be the products of an amplification reaction, including both target an signal amplification); purified samples, such as purified genomic DNA, RNA, proteins etc.; unpurified samples and samples containing (parts of) cells, bacteria, viruses, parasites or funghi.
As it is well known in the art, virtually any experimental manipulation may have been done on the sample. In general, the terms “biochip” or “Lab-on-a-Chip” or alike, refer to systems, comprising at least one micro-fluidic component or biosensor, that regulate, transport, mix and store minute quantities of fluids rapidly and reliably to carry out desired physical, chemical and biochemical reactions in larger numbers. These devices offer the possibility of human health assessment, genetic screening and pathogen detection. In addition, these devices have many other applications for manipulation and/or analysis of non-biological samples. Biochip devices are already being used to carry out a sequence of tasks, e.g. cell lyses, material extraction, washing, sample amplification, analysis etc. They are progressively used to carry out several preparation and analysis tasks in parallel, e.g. detection of several bacterial diseases. As such, micro-fluidic devices and biochips already contain a multiplicity of components, the number of which will only increase as the devices become more effective and more versatile.
Many of the components are electrical components used to sense or modify a property of the sample or fluid, such as heating elements, pumping elements, valves etc., and are frequently realized by direct fabrication of thin film electronics on the substrate of the device. Suitable properties that can be sensed or modified include, but are not limited to, temperature; flow rate or velocity; pressure, fluid, sample or analyte presence or absence, concentration, amount, mobility, or distribution; an optical characteristic; a magnetic characteristic; an electrical characteristic; electric field strength, disposition, or polarity.
One problem of this approach is that every electrical component on the device requires control terminals to independently control the component. Consequently, more space is required to connect the components to the control devices than to realize the devices themselves. Ultimately, the number of control terminals will become so large that it will become impractical to arrange all the terminals at the periphery of the device to make electrical contact. One possibility to realize the electrical contact is the use of an electrical contact foil.
In order to avoid a large number of control terminals, U.S. Pat. No. 6,852,287 proposes embodiments of a method to control a number N of independently controllable components with smaller number of control terminals. In order to achieve this, both the use of multiplexing techniques or passive matrix techniques is proposed. In particular, the matrix technique is extremely attractive, as this allows for the maximum number of components to be controlled with the minimum number of control terminals. Conceptually, if one specific heater element is activated also a number of other heater elements will be activated unintentionally. As a result, heat will be generated where it is not required, and the heat generated at the intended heater element will be different than required as either some of the applied current has traveled through alternative paths, or the applied voltage is dropped along the rows and columns before reaching the heater element intended to be activated.
It is an object of the invention to provide a micro-fluidic device having an improved performance compared to passive matrix based devices. This object is achieved by a micro-fluidic device, e.g. a biochip, fabricated on a substrate based upon active matrix principles. The device is preferably fabricated from one of the well known large area electronics technologies, such as a-Si, LTPS or organic transistor technologies. The active matrix makes it possible to independently control a larger number of components on the device with a smaller number of control terminals.
The present invention describes a micro-fluidic device including a two-dimensional array of a plurality of components for processing a fluid and/or for sensing properties of the fluid. Each component is coupled to at least one control terminal enabling an active matrix to change the state of each component individually. The active matrix includes a two-dimensional array of electronic components realized in thin film technology. The active matrix provides a high versatility of the device. The thin film technology ensures a very cost efficient manufacturing also of large devices.
In one advantageous embodiment of the invention the electronic components of the active matrix are formed by thin film transistors having gate, source and drain electrodes. In this case the active matrix includes a set of select lines and a set of control lines such that each individual component is controlled by one select line and one control line and the gate electrode of each thin film transistor is connected to a select line.
In another advantageous embodiment of the invention a memory device is provided for storing a control signal supplied to the control terminal.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention the electronic components are formed by thin film diodes, e.g. metal-insulator-metal (MIM) diodes. It is preferred that a MIM diode connects a first electrode of each component to a control line, and a second electrode of each component is connected to a select line.
In another advantageous embodiment of the invention the thin film diodes are PIN or Schottky diodes, wherein a first diode connects a first electrode of each component to a control line, wherein a second diode connects the first electrode of each component to a common rest line and wherein a second electrode of each component is connected to a select line.
In an advantageous development of the invention the first diode is replaced by a pair of diodes connected in parallel and the second diode as well is replaced by a pair of diodes connected in parallel.
In yet another advantageous development the first diode is replaced by a pair of diodes connected in series, and also the second diode is replaced by a pair of diodes connected in series.
The invention will be better understood and other particular features and advantages will become apparent on reading the following description appended with drawings. In the drawings:
In this way an active matrix is realized to ensure that all components can be driven independently. The component 2 may be any electronic device e.g. a heater element, a pumping element, a valve, a sensing component etc. being driven by either a voltage or a current signal. It is to be understood that the examples for the components 2 are not to be construed in a limiting sense. Activating a component 2 means changing its state e.g. by turning it from on to off, or vice versa or by changing its setting. It is also noted that the individual switching means 3 may comprise a plurality of sub components comprising both active and/or passive electronic components. However, there is no requirement that all sub components are activated together.
The operation of the micro-fluidic device 1 illustrated in
The device will then remain in the non-addressed state until the following control signal requires to change the state of any one of the components 2, at which point the above sequence of operation is repeated.
The two-dimensional array formed by the control lines 4 and the select lines 6 can also be described in terms of rows and columns, where the select lines 6 define the rows and the control lines 4 the columns.
It is also possible to control more than one component 2 in a given row simultaneously by applying a control signal to more than one column in the array during the select period. It is possible to sequentially control components in different rows by activating another row by using the select driver and applying a control signal to one or more columns in the array.
It is also possible to address the micro-fluidic device 1 such that a component 2 is only activated while the control signal is present. However, in a preferred embodiment, it is advantageous to incorporate a memory device into the component whereby the control signal is remembered after the select period is completed. For the memory device a capacitor or a transistor based memory element is suitable. This makes it possible to have a multiplicity of components at any point across the array activated simultaneously. This option is not available in the passive system known in the prior art. Of course, if a memory device is available, a second control signal will explicitly be required to de-activate the component.
After having illustrated the general concept and the advantages of a micro-fluidic device 1 in the following description three specific embodiments will be explained.
The device will then remain in the non-addressed state until the following control signal requires to change the state of any one of the components, at which point the above sequence of operation is repeated.
With a TFT based switch, it is again possible to control more than one component in a given row simultaneously by applying a control signal to more than one column in the array during the select period. It is possible to sequentially control components in different rows by activating another row by using the select driver and by applying a control signal to one or more columns in the array. Furthermore, it is still possible to address the system such that the component is only activated while the control signal is present, or alternatively to incorporate a memory device into the component (e.g. a capacitor element, or a transistor based memory element) whereby the control signal is remembered after the select period is completed.
In particular,
In the second pixel circuit 12b each diode 13, 14 is replaced by a pair of diodes connected in parallel thus increasing the current carrying capacity of the pixel circuit 12b compared to the pixel circuit 12a.
Similarly, higher voltages can easily be accommodated by providing diodes in series as this prevents breakdown of separate diodes at high reverse voltage because the voltage is split across the diodes. The pixel circuit 12c shown on the right hand side of
The number of external connections is equal to the number of rows plus columns plus one, which is the common reset line 16. The circuit is very independent of the diode characteristics, and PIN (p-type, intrinsic, n-type) or Schottky diodes can be chosen. The circuit can be made redundant for short or open circuit errors by using extra diodes in series or parallel. The rows are driven using a reset method with five voltage levels according to the method suggested by K. E. Kuijk already mentioned above.
A PIN (or Schottky—IN) diode can be formed using a simple 3-layer process. An amorphous semiconductor layer, a stack of p-doped, intrinsic, and n-doped regions, is sandwiched between top an bottom metal lines, which are oriented perpendicular. The electrical properties are hardly alignment sensitive.
Similar to the thin film diode technology, an active matrix using metal-insulator-metal (MIM) diode technology for making an active matrix is technologically less demanding than using TFTs at the expense of a somewhat reduced flexibility.
Traditionally, MIM diode active matrix arrays, as used for active matrix LCDs, have a layout similar to the passive matrix as discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,852,287. However, a MIM diode is introduced as a non-linear resistance element in series with each component, to allow for active matrix addressing as it is shown in
The MIM device is created by separating 2 metal layers by a thin insulating layer and structure and is conveniently realized in the form of a cross over structure. Examples are hydrogenated silicon nitride sandwiches between Cr of Mo metals as suggest by A. G. Knapp an R. A. Hartmann in Proceeding of the 14th International Display Research Conference (1994), page 14. A second example is Ta2O5 insulator sandwiched between Ta metal electrodes.
In the micro-fluidic device schematically shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05108796.3 | Sep 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB06/53256 | 9/13/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/19/2008 |