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BIOELECTRONICS and nanotechnology the bridge between electronics and life sciences

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Title: BIOELECTRONICS and nanotechnology the bridge between electronics and life sciences


1
BIO-ELECTRONICS(and nanotechnology)the bridge
between electronics and life sciences
  • Luc De Schepper
  • Director IMO/IMOMEC

2
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

3
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

4
What is bio-electronics ?
  • Bio-electronics is the bridge between
  • ELECTRONICS AND LIFE
    SCIENCE

5
Why bio-electronics ?
  • ELECTRONICS was the driving technology of the
    20th century transistor, televison, personal
    computer, mobile phone, internet
  • Many people predict that LIFE SCIENCES will be
    one of the driving forces for the technological
    development in the 21th century (see
    Converging technologies for improving human
    performance, report of the NSF (USA), 2002,
    available on Blackboard)
  • BIO-ELECTRONICS is intended to link the most
    succesfull technology of the 20th century with
    one of the most promising technologies for the
    21th century !

6
Who is taking part in the bio-electronic research
in the tUL ?
  • Partners in the bio-electronics research project
    of the tUL
  • At LUC (development of new biosensor concepts)
  • Institute for Materials Research (IMO) (materials
    and electronics)
  • Biomedical Institute (BIOMED) (biochemistry,
    biotechnology, application in auto-immune
    diseases)
  • At UM (applications of bio-electronics)
  • CARIM
  • NUTRIM
  • AzM
  • IMEC (integration of succesfull concepts in
    micro-electronic devices)

7
A unique co-operation
  • RESEARCH
  • IMO, IMOMEC and BIOMED develop new biosensor
    concepts
  • IMEC integrates succesful concepts in
    micro-electronic devices
  • BIOMED, CARIM and NUTRIM define applications and
    test the biosensors for diagnostic and
    therapeutic use
  • EDUCATION
  • Unique multidisciplinary Master in Life Sciences
    in Flanders and the Netherlands BIO-ELECTRONICS
    AND NANOTECHNOLOGY
  • (accessible for bachelors in Life Sciences,
    Physics, Chemistry, Biology)

8
New biosensor concepts
  • Current research focus new types of biosensors
    based on new materials

artificial diamond (CVD diamond)
Multifunctional semiconducting polymers
9
Bio-elektronics is multidisciplinary
BIO-ELECTRONICS
AzM
Application
Development
10
Bio-electronics and nanotechnology
  • Wat is nanotechnology ?
  • NANO means small
  • Nanotechnology technology on a small scale
  • In numbers
  • 1 micrometer 1 mm 0,001 mm 1/1000
    millimeter
  • 1 nanometer 1 nm O,000001 mm 1/1.000.000 mm
  • 1 nanometer 1/1.000.000 mm
  • 1 nanometer 1/1.000.000.000 m

11
Why nanotechnology ?
  • To link ELECTRONICS and biological systems we
    need to work on micrometer- or nanometer scale !
  • Example on a micrometerschaal connection between
    a neuron and a neuron well in silicon

0,01 mm
0,01mm 10mm
12
Why nanotechnology ?
  • On nanometer scale the dimensions of electronic
    materials fit to the dimensions of individual
    biomolecules !
  • ELECTRONIC MATERIAL BIOMOLECULE

13
The Scale of Things
Human made
In nature
MINIATURIZATION
Objects fashioned from metals, ceramics, glasses,
polymers ...
SELF ASSEMBLY
5/20/00
14
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

15
Manufacturing technologies for bio-electronics
  • We want to produce structures on a micrometer or
    nanometer scale which are able to connect
    biological entities and electronic systems
  • Micro- and nanometer scale structures can be made
    in two ways
  • By miniaturisation TOP-DOWN
  • By building up, starting from smaller building
    blocks BOTTOM UP
  • TOP-DOWN use of well known techniques from
    micro-electronics (to be pushed somewhat further)
  • BOTTOM-UP manipulating individual atoms new !
  • BIO-ELECTRO INTERCONNECTION TECHNOLOGY new !

16
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

17
TOP-DOWN TECHNOLOGY
TOP DOWN - MINIATURISATION
5/20/00
18
Top-down technology
  • Standard manufacturing technology for
    micro-electronics (chips or integrated circuits)
  • To be discussed next week
  • IMEC is a world leading lab in developing proces
    modules
  • TYPICAL FEATURE SIZE
  • 1 micrometer 1000 nanometer STANDARD
  • 0,1 micrometer 100 nanometer STATE OF THE
    ART
  • 0,01 micrometer 10 nanometer 2010

19
Top-down technology pentium chips on a wafer
20
Top-down technology packaging of a chip in a
DIL package
21
The packaged PENTIUM chip
22
Nano is very small How can we visualise the
structures on a chip ?
  • Conventional light microscopes cannot be used in
    the submicron range (resolving power is too low)
  • electron microscopes !

23
Scanning electron microscope (SEM)
24
Metal interconnects in an IBM 233 MHz processor
(SEM image)
0.0,5 mm 500nm
25
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

26
BOTTOM-UP TECHNOLOGY
BOTTOM UP
5/20/00
27
BOTTOM-UP
  • Some people say this is the only real form of
    NANOTECHNOLOGY
  • Nanotechnology is the technology based on the
    manipulation of individual atoms and molecules to
    build structures to complex atomic
    specifications.
  • To make nanometer scale structures via bottom-up
    techniques we must be able
  • to manipulate INDIVIDUAL ATOMS/MOLECULES
  • To tell the individual atoms/molecules to
    organise themselves in a predefined structure
    (SELF ASSEMBLY)

28
Manipulating indivual atomscan it be done ?
Richard Feynmann
The principles of physics, as far as I can see,
do not speak against the possibility of
maneuvering things atom by atom. It is not an
attempt to violate any laws... but in practice,
it has not been done because we are too
big. RICHARD FEYNMANN, 1959
29
Visualising and manipulating atoms with an STM
(Scanning Tunneling Microscope)
  • Tunneling current between a very fine tip and a
    surface can be used to visualise individual atoms
  • A potential difference between the tip and the
    surface can be used to pick up individual atoms

STM image of a Si surface
30
Example The IBM logo written with 35 Xenon
atoms !
  • STM image

1 nm
31
Bottom-up technology self assembly
  • Manipulation of individual atom with STM is slow
    and is not applicable to all kinds of atoms
  • Alternative SELF ASSEMBLY of atoms/molecules
    atoms or molecules organise themselves to form a
    particular programmed structure
  • Nature can do it ! All living creatures are
    self-assembled structures.
  • Can we do it ? First steps

32
Bottom-up programmed self assembly of
biomolecules (state of the art)
  • A programmed self-assembly of DNA molecules
    between synthetic membranes
  • Blue DNA
  • Green/white hydrophylic end of the artificial
    cell membrane molecules
  • Yellow/brown hydrofobic tails of the articial
    cell membrane molecules
  • The distance between the DNA molecules can be
    programmed to be between 2.5 and 6 nm
  • J. Rädler, Science, 275, 810 (1997)

3 nm
33
Bottom-up self-assembly of polymers (state of
the art)
  • Ss(Shimizu, Univ. South
  • Carolina, 2000)

34
Bottom-up self assembly (state of the art)
  • Self assembly of a polymer and a gold-thiol
    complex

Nature 404, 746, April 2000
35
Bottom-up self assembly(science fiction)
  • Building molecular machines
  • Nanobots (see next week !)

Molecular precision controller
Molecular pump
36
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

37
How to interconnect electronics and bio-entities
?
  • Bio-entity biomolecule, cell, neuron,
  • Electronic system semiconducting surface, chip,
    integrated cicuit
  • To capture individual target molecules we need
    BIOCHEMICAL PROBES for ANCHORING target molecules
  • In many cases we need LINKING LAYERS (e.g. to
    connect the biochemical probes to the
    semiconducting surface)

38
Interconnecting bio-entities to an electonic
system
39
Some self-assembly may be required
SOME SELF-ASSEMBLY MAY BE REQUIRED FOR EFFICIENT
ANCHORING
40
Examples of biochemical probes and linking
layers (state of the art for Si)
  • Linking layer silanes on siliconoxide or thiols
    on gold
  • Biochemical probes antibodies, DNA fragments

Y
Biochemical probes
Biochemical probes
silanes
thiol
Si-oxide
gold
Si based electron. system
41
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

42
State of the art in bio-electronics
  • Top-down based technologies on micrometer scale
    are in use today
  • Biosensors
  • Micro-electromechanical systems
  • Bottom-up technologies in early research state

43
Biosensors state of the art
  • Working principle
  • immobilisation (anchoring) of targeted
    biomolecules on the sensor surface
  • Immobilisation causes the transducer to send a
    signal tot the electronic interface
  • User reads the concentration on a display

44
Biosensors different tranducer types (state of
the art IMEC)
Nanoscaled IDE Sensors
CMOS Integrated Multiparameter Sensors
Microphysiometer
Acoustic Wave Sensors
  • DNA
  • antibody/antigen
  • immunosensing
  • Bloodgas sensor
  • pCO2, pO2, pH
  • HTDS
  • Calorimetric (D heat)
  • antibody/antigen
  • immunosensing
  • liquid identification

45
Biosensors state of the art
  • In vitro detection of very low concentrations of
    biomolecules (e.g. Glucose in blood)
  • DNA chips recognition of DNA fragments and genes
  • Detection limit better dan 1 ng per ml

46
Biosensors commercial systems
47
Micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS)
  • MEMS are top-down made components which combine
    ELECTRONIC en MECHANICAL functions
  • State of the art micrometer scale
  • Medical MEMS are (or will be) used for
  • minimal invasive diagnostics and surgery
  • smart implants
  • Local drug deposition

48
MEMS integration of mechanics and electronics
  • Micromotor and -gears

50mm
49
Medical MEMS today
  • PACEMAKER

50
Cochlear implant

51
Implanted defibrillator
52
Heart pump Jarvik 2000
53
Medical MEMS today
Blood pressure sensors to be build in in a
catheder
multifinger microrobot for surgery
54
Medical MEMS today
  • Implants to stimulate specific nerves in the
    brain (application Parkinson and epilepsy)

Vagus Nerve Stimulation system (CYBERONICS)
55
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

56
A look into the future
  • Top-down further development of intelligent
    medical MEMS for implantation (e.g. articial eye
    and ear, implantable glucosesensor, .
  • Bottom-up early research stadium. Self-assembled
    nanomachines are not for the next decade.
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
    rapidly advancing field for biomolecules, cells
    and neurons. The neuro-electronic synapse seems
    to be possible, brain implants will become a
    reality.

57
Medical MEMS the future (5 years)
  • Retinal implants to give blind patients a limited
    view
  • Example for patients with damaged fotoreceptors
    in the retina (but undamaged optical nerve)
  • A mini camera is mounted on glasses and sends
    digitised images via a laser to the implanted
    chip (stmulation circuit). The chip transforms
    the images into electrical pulses which are sent
    to an electrode array fixed on the retina.

58
Medical MEMS science fiction
  • Nanomachines are injected into the blood stream
    and carry out a number of different tasks
    (reparing damaged cells, killing cancer cells,)

red blood cell
nanomachine
59
Neuro-electronic synapse

Neuron on a matrix of 128x128 Transistors (P.
Fromherz)
Rat neuron on an array of Transistors (P.
Fromherz)
60
Neuro-electronic synapsescience fiction
  • Based on direct coupling of electronics to
    neurons
  • Implantation of neural implants that directly
    communicate with a large number of brain cells
    (within 30 year ?)
  • Dramatic increase in brain capacity
  • Brain and implant think together
  • Learning could be replaced by implanting a
    module

61
Neuro-electronische synapse brain power versus
chip power
  • Calculating power of a 1.000 PC versus a brain
    as a function of time
  • 2000 PC calculating power equal to the brain of
    an insect
  • 2040 equal to the brain of a human
  • 2060 equal to the cumulative brain capacity of
    the world population

62
Content
  • What is bio-electronics ?
  • Why bio-electronics ?
  • Basic approaches
  • TOP DOWN
  • BOTTOM UP
  • bio-electronic interconnection technology
  • State of the art in bio-electronics
  • A look into the future
  • Conclusions

63
Conclusions
  • Bio-electronics realises the link between
    electronics and biological entities
    (biomolecules, neurons, cells)
  • This is realised on a micrometer or nanometer
    scale
  • (1 nm 1/1.000.000 mm)
  • Micro- and nanometer scale structures can be
    manufactured in two ways
  • TOP-DOWN (conventional miniaturisation as used in
    micro-electronics)
  • BOTTOM-UP (manupulation of individual
    atoms/molecules or self-assembly)
  • Interconnecting electronics and bio-entities
    requires specific technologies neuro-electronic
    synapse, biochemical probes, linking layers,

64
Conclusions
  • What can we expect in the future ?
  • Top-down technology further down scaling of
    litography based technology (towards 45 nm and 32
    nm).
  • Bottom-up technology first steps are made in
    fundamental research. Bottom-up made nanomachines
    will not be realised on a short time scale !
  • Neuro-electronic synapse the principle has been
    demonstrated, but practical applications are not
    for the near future
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