This invention relates to surface acoustic wave sensors or identification devices with biosensing capability.
The invention described and claimed in parent application Ser. No. 10/729,920 provides a surface acoustic wave sensor or identification device having a piezoelectric substrate, an interdigitated transducer (IDT) input/output mounted on the substrate for receiving a radio frequency (RF) signal and propagating a corresponding surface acoustic wave along a surface of the substrate, and an IDT reflector array mounted on the substrate and operable to receive the surface acoustic wave and reflect the surface acoustic wave in modified form back to the IDT input/output for transmission of a corresponding modified RF signal from the device. The IDT reflector array has at least one reflector sector whose reflectivity characteristics are controlled to control the nature of the modified RF signal. The device also includes at least one reflector segment having a fluidic chamber which in use contains fluid operable to control the nature of the reflected surface acoustic wave and hence the nature of the modified RF signal.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a surface acoustic wave sensor or identification device of this kind which has a biolayer which is modified by the fluid in the fluidic chamber.
According to the present invention, a surface acoustic wave sensor or identification device has a piezoelectric material, an interdigitated transducer (IDT) input/output mounted on the piezoelectric material for receiving a radio frequency (RF) signal and propagating a corresponding acoustic wave along a surface of the piezoelectric material, an IDT finger electrode array mounted on the piezoelectric material and operable to communicate with the IDT input/output for transmission of a modified RF signal from the device, the IDT finger electrode array having at least one finger electrode segment whose propagating characteristics are controlled to control the nature of the modified RF signal, a biolayer mounted on the piezoelectric material and associated with the finger electrode segment, and a fluidic chamber associated with the biolayer and which in use contains fluid which, if a predetermined substance to be sensed or identified is present, operates to modify the biolayer which in turn controls the nature of the modified RF signal.
The acoustic wave generated by the IDT may be any one of the recognized types, for example Rayleigh, Surface Transverse Wave, etc. Also, in this application, the term “fluid” follows the accepted definition which, when taken in its broadest sense, includes materials in either the liquid or gaseous phase.
The IDT finger electrode array may comprise a reflector array or may comprise a modulated IDT array.
The fluidic chamber may have an inlet and an outlet whereby in use fluid flows through the chamber from the inlet to the outlet.
The at least one finger electrode segment may have at least one pair of interdigitated fingers which communicate with the fluidic chamber. The at least one pair of interdigitated fingers may project into the chamber.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Referring first to
Recent literature by Hunt et al., (“Time-dependent signatures of acoustic wave biosensors,” IEEE Proceedings, Vol. 91, no. 6, pp. 890-901, June 2003.) and (Stubbs, D. D., Lee, S. H. and Hunt, W. D., “Investigation of cocaine plumes using surface acoustic wave immunosassay sensors,” Analytical Chemistry, vol. 75, no. 22, pp. 6231-6235, Nov. 15, 2003) has demonstrated that an acoustic wave biosensor with an immobilized biolayer need not be restricted to the detection of biomolecules within a liquid phase, but can detect low vapour pressure chemical molecules such as pathogens, drugs and explosives.
The reflector array 130 returns a reflected acoustic wave 150 in the form of a modified interrogation signal such that the modification of the RF signal is proportional to the binding of biological and chemical substances to the biolayer 135. A fluidic chamber 160 enables biological and chemical fluid therein to interact with the biolayer 135. The modified reflected acoustic wave 150 is then reconverted back within the IDT 115 to a modified RF signal which is retransmitted back via the antenna 120 to the interrogation unit.
The main interrogation unit now has two reference signals followed by a perturbed signal returning from the RFID biosensor. The detection algorithm located within the main interrogation unit can deduce, by comparison techniques between the reference signals and the perturbed signal from reflector C 236, binding events which occurred within the biolayer 235.
A similar approach to selectable reflector arrays is to implement a SAW RFID biosensor with selectable IDT array 300.
In the embodiment shown in
Previous literature by co-inventor Edmonson (“SAW Pulse Compression Using Combined Barker Codes,” M. Eng Thesis in Electrical Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, March 1989) has demonstrated the use of correlation techniques and sidelobe analysis for the detection of modulated signals using SAW devices. The manner in which a passive SAW RFID biosensor can detect a substance will now be explained by means of example. The SAW structure will be that as shown in
6. After 4 time periods, the acoustic wave has cleared the IDT array 316 in both directions and the summation values are shown in Table 2. These are the equivalent RF values which will be transmitted back to the main interrogation unit.
9. Table 3 illustrates the resulting propagation of the acoustic wave and the perturbed value of bit #4377 which arbitrarily shown as 0.9 rather than 1.0 to illustrate the binding effect. Even though a change caused by the biolayer is represented by a change in amplitude and not frequency, it can be shown that when the perturbed interrogation signal is returned back to the interrogation unit and undergoes a correlation process with a reference signal, the frequency change can be represented by an amplitude change within the resulting peak and sidelobe values.
10. The resultant summation is shown in Table 4, illustrating the change in the summation values when compared to Table 2 for the unperturbed state. The main interrogation unit will decode a different set of summation peak and sidelobe values with respect to the unperturbed state when no binding occurred and determine if a detection sequence has occurred. The difference between the summation values of Tables 2 and 4 is proportional to the amount of substance detected.
The finger pattern of the chirped array 419 varies in width. Wide fingers represent lower frequencies and narrow fingers represent higher frequencies following the relationship λ=v/f, where λ is the acoustic wavelength, v is the acoustic velocity and f is the frequency. Typically, each finger is λ/4 in width.
The RFID biosensor of
With no binding of substances to the biolayer 435, the interrogation signal excites the IDT array 416 to produce an unperturbed return signal back to the interrogation unit such that the modulated frequency of the signal increases linearly from a low to high frequency component. When there is a binding event between the fluid and the biolayer 435, a perturbed returning signal back to the interrogation unit is produced such that the modulated frequency component of the signal is no longer linear due to the change in velocity occurring under the higher frequency fingers, thereby perturbing the frequency component of the signal. It can be shown that, when the perturbed interrogation signal is returned back to the interrogation unit and undergoes a correlation process with an equivalent matched filter such as a down-chirped reference signal, the frequency change can be represented by an amplitude change within the resulting peak and sidelobe values.
Other embodiments and advantages of the invention will now be readily apparent to a person skilled in the art, the scope of the invention being defined in the appended claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/729,920 filed Dec. 9, 2003, the contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10729920 | Dec 2003 | US |
Child | 11139477 | May 2005 | US |