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Article

Temperature Compensation Circuit for ISFET Sensor

1
National Engineering School of Monastir (ENIM), University of Monastir, Monastir 5000, Tunisia
2
Electronics and Microelectronics Laboratory, LR99ES30, Faculty of Sciences of Monastir, University of Monastir, Monastir 5000, Tunisia
3
Higher Institute of Applied Sciences and Technology of Sousse (ISSATSo), University of Sousse, Sousse 4003, Tunisia
4
Nanomaterials, Microsystems for Health, Environment and Energy Laboratory, LR16CRMN01, Centre for Research on Microelectronics and Nanotechnology, Sousse 4034, Tunisia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
J. Low Power Electron. Appl. 2020, 10(1), 2; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/jlpea10010002
Submission received: 3 November 2019 / Revised: 20 December 2019 / Accepted: 21 December 2019 / Published: 4 January 2020

Abstract

:
PH measurements are widely used in agriculture, biomedical engineering, the food industry, environmental studies, etc. Several healthcare and biomedical research studies have reported that all aqueous samples have their pH tested at some point in their lifecycle for evaluation of the diagnosis of diseases or susceptibility, wound healing, cellular internalization, etc. The ion-sensitive field effect transistor (ISFET) is capable of pH measurements. Such use of the ISFET has become popular, as it allows sensing, preprocessing, and computational circuitry to be encapsulated on a single chip, enabling miniaturization and portability. However, the extracted data from the sensor have been affected by the variation of the temperature. This paper presents a new integrated circuit that can enhance the immunity of ion-sensitive field effect transistors (ISFET) against the temperature. To achieve this purpose, the considered ISFET macro model is analyzed and validated with experimental data. Moreover, we investigate the temperature dependency on the voltage-current (I-V). Accordingly, an improved conditioning circuit is designed in order to reduce the temperature sensitivity on the measured pH values of the ISFET sensor. The numerical validation results show that the developed solution accurately compensates the temperature variation on the measured pH values at low power consumption.

1. Introduction

The ion-sensitive field-effect transistors (ISFETs) sensor has played a major role in enabling the fabrication of fully integrated CMOS-based chemical sensing systems. This has allowed several new application areas, with the most promising fields being ion imaging and full genome sequencing. However, the data from this sensor is strongly affected by the variation of the temperature. ISFET is a chemical sensitive microsensor that is based on the field effect transistor, which was invented by Bergveld in the 1970s [1].
The detection principle (shown in Figure 1) of the ISFET sensor mechanism is centered on the charge adsorption at the solid ion interface between the electrolyte and the layer that contains the hydroxyl groups [2]. The assembly of hydroxyls can give or accept a proton. As a result of this process, a double layer capacity is generated with a potential variation that in its turn has an impact on the threshold voltage of the transistor according to the H+ ion concentration (i.e., pH) [2]. Moreover, ISFET is a compact sensor that enables a fast pH measurement.
However, this type of sensor is strongly affected by the temperature variation. Therefore, several researchers [3,4,5,6,7] have proposed various temperature compensation systems such as the proper choice of a biasing current for a thermal working point to reduce the ISFET’s temperature dependency [4]. Hence, the use of a junction diode Zener [4] for temperature compensation on a single ISFET sensor, the employment of an ISFET with a differential configuration (use of a differential amplifier) [8] that increases the immunity against temperature variation, or the combination of attenuators and a differential amplifier alongside with Caprio’s quad [7] were used in order to enhance the temperature stability. The trend of the recent works is set on ISFET sensor arrays [9,10,11,12,13], but most of these researches are focused on the wearable and thermoelectrically powered system [11] and on achieving very high accuracy and a small settling time [10]. They also focused on system-on-chip for real-time ion imaging [13], but most of them did not focus on the temperature effect on the response of the sensor and did not give a robust solution to reduce it. From these approaches, it can be noticed that the temperature dependency is studied at a particular or in a narrow range.
For a wide range of pH values, the temperature compensation becomes more difficult, since the temperature’s coefficient of an electrochemical device is a function of the pH value [14]. Moreover, the ISFET’s temperature dependency tends to exhibit a random behavior [15,16,17]. The straight-line-based temperature compensation limits its scope when dealing with the actual nonlinear temperature characteristic of ISFET’s device at different values. Furthermore, the temperature dependency of measuring a circuit also introduces additional temperature influence on the measured data. As a result, the ease of combining the temperature compensation circuit, the efficiency of the compensation technique, the circuit sensitivity, as well as the circuit simplicity with respect to body effects became the key design considerations in an integrated circuit design. Respectively, it is particularly challenging for ISFETs to work in an environment where the required task is to measure different pH ranges alongside different temperature values [18,19]. Nevertheless, the conventional means used in the signal processing of ISFETs, in particular the elementary current-voltage conversion circuits, do not reach optimal performance since they are sensitive to light variations and temperature especially when we use a sensor array (spread of the error that is related to temperature). In this study, it is important to understand the temperature behavior of an ISFET from a foundation work alongside research of a robust ISFET interface circuit combined with an improved temperature compensation technique. In view of the above problems, an improved ISFET interface circuit with a simple structure is proposed. This is in conjunction with the investigation of an improved dynamic biasing temperature compensation method. The latter is concerned with the arrangement of numerical iteration and mutual compensation in ISFET’s MOS transconductance characteristics. This results in almost zero temperature coefficients at any pH value. This enables the ISFET’s interface circuit to measure simultaneously the correct values of pH at any temperature. In this work, we investigate the temperature’s influence on the ISFET. Then, we propose a new integrated circuit, which is capable of reducing the temperature dependency and is applicable for systems such as sensor arrays. Then, we present a new demonstration of temperature compensation using the differential setup. Many researchers have reported several ISFET/reference field effect transistor (ReFET) topologies [20,21,22,23,24,25], and the first circuit that used ISFET/ReFET was introduced by Bergveld [20]. In this work, we present a new circuit based on differential measurement (ISFET/ReFET) operating in a weak inversion regime, and we demonstrate with a simple manner (mathematically) the temperature compensation using the ISFET/ReFET topology.
This paper is organized as follows. Section 2 presents the conventional ISFET macro model, Section 3 investigates the temperature’s effect on the validated ISFET model, Section 4 illustrates a new conditioning circuit for temperature compensation, and Section 5 concludes the paper.

2. ISFET Macro Model

The considered ISFET macro model that captures the ISFET sensor current voltage (I-V) characteristic behavior is under temperature variation and based on the model developed under PSPICE [26,27]. The ISFET response to the H + ion is demonstrated by site binding theory, which gives a complete description of the ISFET behavior when combined with the Gouy–Chapman–Stern model and MOSFET physics [26]. As a consequence, a set of equations has been drawn up in order to study the sensitivity of the sensor and its dependence according to the physicochemical parameters of the ISFET. Subsequently, the SPICE macro model considers the ISFET sensor as two uncoupled stages: an electrochemical stage that represents the interface electrolyte–insulator modeled by site binding theory, along with an electronic stage, which is modeled by MOSFET. The considered equivalent electrical circuit of the ISFET macro model is shown in Figure 2.
Where R is the reference electrode, D is the drain, S is the electrolyte–insulation source, B is the substrate, and V p H refers to the potential of the electrolyte–insulation interface. The expression of V p H can be written as follows:
V p H =   E r e f + φ 0
φ 0 = 2.3   K T q α ( p H p z c p H )
where   E r e f   is the potential applied to the reference electrode, φ 0 is the electrostatic potential, which is directly proportional to pH and temperature, K is the Boltzmann constant, T is the absolute temperature, p H p z c   is the pH-zero point of charge, q is the electron charge, and α is the corrective parameter for pH–ISFET, which ranges between 0 and 1. The electrochemical properties of the insulating surface were combined with the nonlinear current-voltage (I-V) MOSFET, resulting in an expression of the threshold voltage of the ISFET, including terms derived from the MOSFET theory as well as terms of an electrochemical nature [26]:
V t I ( I S F E T ) =   ( E r e f + φ l j ) ( φ 0 χ e ) [ Q s s + Q s c C o x 2 φ f + φ s c q ]
V t I ( I S F E T ) = V t M ( M O S F E T ) + E r e f + φ l j + χ e φ 0 φ m q
where φ f is the fermi potential of a semiconductor, Q s s is the charge density per surface unit at the insulator/semiconductor interface,   Q s c is the charge density in the semiconductor depletion region, φ l j is the tension between the reference solution and the electrolyte, C o x is the gate oxide capacity, and χ e is the interface potential electrolyte/insulator dipole. It is worth noting that the potential φ 0 is the only variable that depends on pH. Considering the weak inversion region of MOSFET, the I-V characteristic of ISFET can be written as follows:
I d s =   I 0 e ( V g s V t I η U t )
where I 0 is a characteristic current, U t is the thermal voltage, and η is the slope factor of the subthreshold. This mode of operation offers an opportunity to have a high intrinsic voltage gain and a low power processing.

2.1. Fabrication and Testing

The N-channel ISFET fabrication was carried out at the Semiconductor Physics Department, Research Institute of Microdevices (Kyiv, Ukraine). The gate dielectric is based on a S i O 2   / S i 3   N 4 sensitive film structure [28]. The sensor chip was attached to a Sital (fused silica) support and was bound to the aluminum conductors. The length of the canal is about 7 µm, and its width is 250 µm. To measure the current voltage ( I d s ) characteristics of the ISFET, the substrate and the source are grounded and the source–drain voltage ( V d s ) was maintained at 1 V. To measure the sensitivity of the ISFET sensor, we used three buffer solutions from pH = 3 to pH = 11. To investigate the reliability and stability of the pH sensor, we evaluated the temperature effects on the responses of the ISFET. Temperature can affect the characteristics of a sensor, the pH of the electrolyte, the potential of a reference electrode, and the measuring system. For latter changes, the temperature was kept constant inside the room. To keep the electrolyte, electrode, and ISFET at constant temperature, a heat-regulating loop including a temperature-sensing system and a heating system have been used. In addition, experimental results can only be compared validly to theory if the temperature during measurements is fixed. Figure 3 shows the experimental setup and the simulated equivalent circuit model implemented in the ADS based on modified SPICE model.
For the experimental setup, we used a GW Instek SPS-606 generation for the V g s variation; for measuring the I d s variation, we used a Keithley 2400 Source Meter, and for V d s , we used a simple DC generator. The results extracted from the simulation of the macro model were compared with the experimental recorded data, as shown in Figure 4.
The good agreement between the experimental and simulated data is confirmed by estimating Error (6), which is about 1.12% (worst case) for pH = 11.01 V g s ⋲ [−1.8 V, −0.5 V]. For the next parts of this work, we used the validated macro model.
ε ( % ) = i = 1 n = 8 ( I d s e x p I d s m o d e l I d s e x p ) × 100
Moreover, Table 1 reports the technological parameters used for the ISFET macro model.

2.2. Sensor Sensitivity

In order to estimate the sensitivity of validated macro model, Figure 5 shows the variations of ( log ( I d s ) ) / V g s as a function of V g s at constant V d s = 1 V. The threshold voltage extraction method present in Figure 5 is inspired from the second derivative method [29], unless this technique can provide an exact threshold value more accurately. The proposed method enables other perspectives for the extraction of the technological parameters of the transistor.
The V t I is extracted for different pH values using the method of the first derivation. These values are then plotted on a graph as a function of the pH.
As seen in Figure 6, the determined sensitivity based on the ISFET macro model simulation (i.e., s m = 54   m V / p H ) has approximately the same the sensitivity, which was calculated based on the experimental data (i.e., s e x p 51   m V / p H ) . In fact, the experimental ISFET characteristics were validated against the implemented macro model in order to accurately predict the pH values.

3. ISFET Temperature-Dependent Behavior

Several works have demonstrated that the ISFET electrochemical behavior shows a temperature dependency. In fact, the temperature variation affects the ISFET sensing circuit such as the reference electrode, electrolyte insulator potential, and MOSFET transistor. It can be expressed as:
T C T   = T C R   + T C I + T C F
where T C T refers to the total temperature coefficient of ISFET. T C R is the temperature coefficient of reference electrode E r e f , which has been reported by [22] with a standard value about 0.14 mV/°C. T C I refers to the temperature coefficient of the interface potential electrolyte insulator. It has also been proven that T C I is a function of pH value. It can differ from 0.54 mV to 1.1 mV as the pH increases from 4 to 10 [30]. The third item in (7) T C F represents the coefficient of the temperature in MOS structure of ISFET. Based on the device physics, the principal parameters that are responsible for the temperature dependency of the MOSFET transistor are the mobility and threshold voltage. For any temperature, it can be modeled as follows:
µ ( T ) = µ ( T 0 ) ( T T 0 ) n  
V t M ( T )   =   V t M   ( T 0 ) + K V T   ( T T 0 )
where T 0 is the reference temperature and n is a constant, with standard values between −1.9 and −2.2, depending on the doping concentrations of silicon. K V T refers to the temperature coefficient of the threshold voltage, which is usually between −0.5 mV/°C and −3 mV/°C.

Analysis of the Temperature Effect on the ISFET Sensor

Studies by Jung-Lung CHIANG et al. [31] have shown that ISFET has a high temperature dependency, which leads to a pH measurement inaccuracy, so it is very important to study the temperature behavior of ISFETs and determine relevant methods to improve their temperature stability.
It is worth noting that by analyzing Figure 7, the drain current I d s of the ISFET macro model varies considerably with the temperature. It deteriorates with an increase in temperature. This behavior is dominated by two phenomena: the degradation of the mobility μ and the shift of the threshold voltage   V t M , which result in the offset of the gate-source voltage V g s below and above the isothermal point, respectively.
For V g s [−2 V, −0.75 V], we notice an offset of the threshold voltage V t I above the isothermal point, which results in an increase of this later when the temperature increases.
For V g s   [ 0.75   V ,   0.5   V ] , the degradation of the mobility μ is observed underneath the isothermal point. In fact, the temperature dependence of of the mobility significantly increases with the temperature [32].
The curvatures of Figure 8 are almost similar to the plots of Figure 7, but the only difference is shown by the dislocation of the isothermal point for the pH values equal to 3 and 8 (both Figure 7 and Figure 8 are obtained from the simulation of ISFET macro model). The dislocation of the isothermal point causes a decrease of the drain-source current I d s and an increase of the gate source voltage V g s .
Figure 9 demonstrates the variation of the threshold voltage as a function of pH over a wide temperature range. The shifting of the threshold voltage also results in the degradation of the sensor sensitivity for high pH values when the temperature varies from 0 to 50 °C. From visual inspection, the sensitivity of the sensor linearly varies with respect to the temperature, which is reported in Table 2.
The presented data in Figure 10 were extracted from Figure 9, and present the traces of the threshold voltage for pH = 6, when the temperature varies from 0 to 50 °C. Figure 10 also illustrates the dependence of the ISFET sensor on the temperature about 10 mV/°C (nearly 20% of sensitivity is affected by temperature).
In cases where we have a sensor array (6 × 8 ISFETs), the noise generated by the temperature can distort any measurement. Therefore, it is necessary to add a complimentary circuit in order to reduce the temperature effect. The next section presents the proposed conditioning circuit that is capable of limiting the temperature dependency of the ISFET microsensor.

4. Proposed Temperature Compensation Circuit

This section analyzes the conditioning circuit architecture. The differential ISFET-based pH measurement is shown in Figure 11 and Figure 12. In fact, the ISFET sensor is used in a conjunction that is sensitive to a specific species (such as H+) and a reference field effect transistor (ReFET), which is insensitive to this species. ReFET was introduced to minimize the drift effects and the noise on the measurement. Both sensors must have the same electrical and chemical characteristics. A ReFET would experience a similar condition as an ISFET except the chance of responding to an occurring chemical reaction [33]. The ISFET/ReFET topology can be implemented in two configurations. The first configuration is to fabricate a REFET similar to ISFET but with a different membrane [2]. The second configuration is to make the REFET/ ISFET completely similar, but insulated and exposed to another analyst where no reaction may happen [34]. However, in addition to the DC offset problem that may bias the ISFET and REFET out of the active region causing the circuit to stack to the power-ground rail, the gate drain capacitance may distort the sensor response. The drain node is unmaintained, and it cannot follow the gate. Hence, with the Miller effects, the gain between the drain and the gate terminals of the deferential topology cause the appearance of the decoupling capacitors on the floating gate, and this may distort the signal. Nevertheless, to overcome the random DC offset, most of the ISFETs require a calibration of the reference electrode; ISFET/ReFET topology may also require more calibration between the ISFET and the reference FET, which makes it a little bit complicated for implementation in the ISFET arrays [2,35]. To overcome these limitations, the presented circuit in Figure 11 presents a solution for ISFET/ReFET topology. The feedback made by the amplifiers (OTA 1 and OTA 2) can control the calibration of the reference electrode to overcome the DC offset and make it easier the implementation of the ReFET/ISFET for the deferential measurement.
The circuit shown in Figure 11 is the one proposed by Irena [36], but the two weak power amplifier types AD8542 were replaced by the operational transconductance amplifier (OTA). The circuit was designed using ADS in TSMC 0.18 µm CMOS process technology. Indeed, all the components shown in Figure 11 are temperature dependent. The power consumption for each OTA is around 8 μ W . Thanks to the feedback made by the two OTAs, this circuit can accurately control the temperature dependence.
The voltage that is applied to the negative inputs of the amplifiers OTA1 and OTA2 is formed by the voltage divider ( R 3 ,   R 4 ), and is written as follows:
V =   R 4 R 4 + R 3 V D D = V d s .
This constant voltage V depends only on the power supply and is considered constant. The drain-source current I d s in the branch of the resistor R 2 is written as follows:
I R 2 =   I d s = R 3 R 2 ( R 4 + R 3 ) V D D
where   I d s   is from Equations (5) and (11), and the gate voltage of the sensor is deduced as follows:
V g s =   η   T   Log   ( R 3 I 0 R 2 ( R 4 + R 3 ) V D D ) + V t I .
We notice from Equation (12) that V g s varies with the threshold voltage, i.e., with the electrochemical potential of the solution φ 0 and the temperature. For the circuit (Figure 12), we assumed that the threshold voltage of this transistor was V t I   =   V t I   + V p H with V t I   and V p H   corresponding respectively to the theoretical threshold voltage of the transistor and the electrochemical potential of the solution. The gate voltage becomes as follows:
V g s =   η   T   L o g   ( R 3 2 η β U T 2 R 2 ( R 4 + R 3 ) V D D ) + V t I   +   V p H .
The DC simulation results of the circuit depicted in Figure 11 are shown in Figure 12. Figure 12a,b present respectively the variation of the output signal versus the input signal and the variation of V o u t ( V o u t = V T   I S F E T V T   R e F E T ) versus the temperature variation for a range from 0 to 50 °C. Indeed, the SPICE models for each component of the circuit were used, and all the components are dependent on the temperature. According to Figure 12a, the output voltage is a linear function of p H . This circuit has a temperature drift of approximately 2 mV/°C, as shown in Figure 12b, where V o u t is considerably affected by the temperature. For pH sensitivity characterization, we worked under a pH range from 6 to 8. When we chose this measurement range, we were aware that for biomedical applications such as pH measurement and acidity monitoring of saliva, blood, urine, and intestinal fluids, a pH range of 6 to 8 would be sufficient [37,38,39].

4.1. Low-Power and Temperature Drift ISFET Compensation Circuit

In order to improve immunity against temperature and increase the overall sensitivity, we propose an improvement circuit technique, which is presented in Figure 13. An instrumentation amplifier put on cascode with an inverter amplifier composes this circuit. The circuits presented in Figure 11 and Figure 13 present two pixels in an ISFET array.
The instrumentation amplifier circuit increases the immunity against the temperature by an infinite common mode rejection ratio (CMRR) [40,41,42]. Therefore, the output signal V o u t 1 is assumed to be not affected by the common noise or temperature:
V o u t 1   =   R 8 R 7 ( 1 2 R 5 R 6 )   ( V T R e F E T   V T I S F E T ) .
As shown in Equation (14), V o u t 1 is proportional to both resistance and thresholds, while the unified temperature-dependent threshold voltage of ISFET in any value can be written as follows [43]:
V T ( I S F E T ) ( T ) T = T 1 =   V T ( p H 7 ) ( T 0 ) +   K V T ( p H ) ( T 1 T 0 ) + 2.303 K   T 1 q   α (   p H p z c p H )
where α is a coefficient with a value range between 0 and 1. The resistance could also be expected to increase with temperature. An intuitive approach to temperature dependence leads one to expect a fractional change in the resistance that is proportional to the temperature change:
R =   R 0 ( 1 + λ ( T 1 T 0 ) )
where R and R 0 are the resistance at temperature T 1 and T 0 (e.g., 27 °C), respectively. λ stands for the temperature coefficient, which depends on the resistance material. Equation (14) becomes as follows:
V o u t 1 = R 8 ( 1 + λ ( T 1 T 0 ) ) R 7 ( 1 + λ ( T 1 T 0 ) ) ( 1 2 R 5 ( ( 1 + λ ( T 1 T 0 ) ) R 6 ( 1 + λ ( T 1 T 0 ) ) ) ( V T ( p H 7 ) ( T 0 ) +   K V T ( p H ) ( T 1 T 0 ) + 2.303 K   T 1 q   α   p H ( r e f ) V T ( p H 7 ) ( T 0 )   K V T ( p H ) ( T 1 T 0 ) 2.303 K   T 1 q   α ( p H p z c p H )
where p H r e f refers to the pH value measured by the ReFET. According to Equation (17) and since the ISFET and ReFET have the same technological parameters, we can neglect the V T ( p H 7 ) ( T 0 ) and the temperature coefficient of the threshold voltage K V T and assume that the resistances R 5 ,   R 6 ,   R 7 , and R 8 have the same material; then, Equation (17) becomes:
V o u t 1   =   R 8 R 7 ( 1 2 R 5 R 6 ) 2.303 K T 1 q α ( p H ( r e f ) p H + p H p z c ) .
Equation (18) illustrates the effectiveness of the proposed circuit for temperature reduction, since the two terms K V T and V T ( p H 7 ) ( T 0 ) are neglected. In addition, the thermal voltage U T = K   T 1 / q will always be present, because it is related to the MOSFET structure and cannot be neglected. Before the proposed circuit, the temperature coefficient of the threshold voltage K V T and the V T ( p H 7 ) ( T 0 ) significantly affect the output voltage. Then, the temperature coefficient can be obtained as follows:
V o u t 1 T | T = T 1   =   R 8 R 7 ( 1 2 R 5 R 6 )   2.303 K   q   α ( p H ( r e f ) p H + p H p z c ) .
For p H ( r e f ) = 4 and p H p z c = 9.2, Equation (19) varies between 0.23   ×   10 6 V/°C and 14.03 ×   10 6 V/°C for p H   [ 1 ,   13 ] . Therefore, we can assume that the temperature has no significant effect on the output voltage. The estimated temperature coefficient for pH = 6 is about 9.43 × 10 6 V/°C.
Figure 14a shows the variation of the output voltage V o u t 1 as a function of the voltage p H for different temperatures ranging from 0 to 50 °C, while Figure 14b presents the dependence of V o u t 1   on the temperature. Figure 14b shows that a 10 °C increase in the temperature results in a decrease of 5   × 10 6   V of the overall system output voltage V o u t 1 , and subsequently, the coefficient of the temperature drift in this circuit becomes in the order of 5   × 10 6   V /°C. Here, we note very well the effectiveness of the instrumentation amplifier as a function of the temperature compensation. In addition, we notice that there is concordance between the mathematical demonstration and the simulation results in terms of a temperature coefficient. Here, we can assume that presented the Equations (18) and (19) can predict the temperature coefficient of ISFET/ReFET topology. Hence, the variation of the output voltage cannot exploit it easily, so we added an inverter amplifier to amplify the output voltage V o u t 1 . Figure 15 shows the output voltage variation V o u t 2 (Figure 15a) as a function of the input voltage for different temperature values.
The resolution found in this circuit is of the order of 324 mV/pH. This circuit has an in–out ratio about 6. As shown in Figure 15b, the proposed circuit has a temperature drift of about 3 ×   10 5 V/°C in pH = 6 for a range of 0 to 50 °C, which is insignificant compared to the ISFET without the conditioning circuit (10 × 10 3 V/°C). We should note that all the components of the circuit present in Figure 11 and Figure 13 are dependent on temperature. This circuit has an estimated power consumption in the order of 1.8 m W .

4.2. Discussion

As it shows from the figures and results above that, the presented circuit undeniably represents an efficient and robust solution for biochemical reaction sensing. Target applications can include diagnostics based on DNA detection. Thanks to the possibilities for H + ion detection, this presented circuit will offer great opportunities in the field of lab-on-chip design. Table 3 compares this work with a previous work in terms of temperature compensation.
Table 4 presents a comparative study with other work for overall sensitivity.
Table 4 shows that the proposed circuit has a low temperature dependence compared to other works, and it shows that the temperature change has no significant effects on the output signal. In addition, we should note that in this work, we used ADS for the first time, and referring to Table 4, most of work used the HSPICE simulation tool. Thus, ADS will open a new perspective in signal processing for ISFET sensors. On the other hand, Table 4 illustrates the overall sensitivity; most of the published work that focused on the enhancement of the sensitivity did not focus on the temperature variation and must be addressed. Meanwhile, Table 3 and Table 4 give a characteristic comparison between the proposed circuit based on OTA and others works. Using TSMC 0.18 µm technology, the proposed circuit based on OTA with low power consumptions and ISFET/ReFET working in a weak inversion regime gives a robust solution to reduce the temperature dependency and enhance the overall sensitivity. The proposed circuit presents a prototype for any biosensor (MEMFET, BioFET, ChemFET).

5. Conclusions

The presented instrumentation with a new conditioning circuit technique has been developed to compensate for the temperature dependence and obtain a good in–out ratio of ISFET microsensors with an assurance of a low consumption. To check the validation of the new conditioning circuit, an ADS simulation of functionality for sensitivity was performed. The ADS macro model treats the ISFET as two isolated stages (an electrochemical stage and an electronic stage), which were presented. In the first step, we validated the macro model by comparing it with experimental values. Then, we investigated the temperature effect on the ISFET, and we showed that this sensor has a strong temperature dependency. After that, we used the validated macro model to develop a new circuit that is capable of staying stable at any temperature from 0 to 50 °C. We also demonstrated that the proposed circuit has a good accuracy to measure the concentration of the pH and guaranteeing at the same time a low consumption at any temperature for a range from 0 to 50 °C. Finally, comparative studies were made in terms of the overall sensitivity.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.G. and W.D.; methodology, A.G.; software, W.D.; validation, A.G., W.D. and B.H.; formal analysis, A.G. and W.D.; investigation, M.B.A.; data curation, A.G.; writing—original draft preparation, A.G. and W.D.; writing—review and editing, A.G. and W.D.; supervision, B.H. and M.B.A. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. 3D representation of a 6 × 8 ion-sensitive field effect transistor (ISFET) array.
Figure 1. 3D representation of a 6 × 8 ion-sensitive field effect transistor (ISFET) array.
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Figure 2. Equivalent electrical circuit of the ISFET structure.
Figure 2. Equivalent electrical circuit of the ISFET structure.
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Figure 3. (a) Experimental setup using the ISFET sensor, (b) ADS circuit simulation using the ISFET model.
Figure 3. (a) Experimental setup using the ISFET sensor, (b) ADS circuit simulation using the ISFET model.
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Figure 4. Model simulated in ADS versus experimental data.
Figure 4. Model simulated in ADS versus experimental data.
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Figure 5. ( log ( I d s ) )   /   V g s   =   f ( V g s ,   P H i )   characteristics for different values of p H { 1 ,   7 ,   13 } at T = 27 °C.
Figure 5. ( log ( I d s ) )   /   V g s   =   f ( V g s ,   P H i )   characteristics for different values of p H { 1 ,   7 ,   13 } at T = 27 °C.
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Figure 6. Variation of V t I of the sensor as a function of the pH (model and experimental data).
Figure 6. Variation of V t I of the sensor as a function of the pH (model and experimental data).
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Figure 7.   I d s = f   ( V g s , V d s = 1   V )   curves of the ISFET sensor at temperatures between 0 and 50 °C.
Figure 7.   I d s = f   ( V g s , V d s = 1   V )   curves of the ISFET sensor at temperatures between 0 and 50 °C.
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Figure 8.   ( V g s ) curves of the ISFET sensor at a temperature between 0 and 50 °C with a step of 10 °C for pH = 3 and 8.
Figure 8.   ( V g s ) curves of the ISFET sensor at a temperature between 0 and 50 °C with a step of 10 °C for pH = 3 and 8.
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Figure 9. pH sensitivity of the ISFET sensor measured for a temperature from 0 to 50 °C with a step of 10 °C.
Figure 9. pH sensitivity of the ISFET sensor measured for a temperature from 0 to 50 °C with a step of 10 °C.
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Figure 10. Threshold voltage as a function of temperature.
Figure 10. Threshold voltage as a function of temperature.
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Figure 11. Differential measurement interface based on ISFET/reference field effect transistor (ReFET).
Figure 11. Differential measurement interface based on ISFET/reference field effect transistor (ReFET).
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Figure 12. (a) Variation of V o u t as a function of pH for different temperatures, (b) variation of V o u t as a function of the temperature.
Figure 12. (a) Variation of V o u t as a function of pH for different temperatures, (b) variation of V o u t as a function of the temperature.
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Figure 13. Operational transconductance amplifier (OTA)-based instrumentation amplifier for an ISFET temperature compensation circuit.
Figure 13. Operational transconductance amplifier (OTA)-based instrumentation amplifier for an ISFET temperature compensation circuit.
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Figure 14. (a) Variation of the output voltage V o u t 1 as a function of p H for different temperatures, (b) variation of V o u t 1 as a function of the temperature.
Figure 14. (a) Variation of the output voltage V o u t 1 as a function of p H for different temperatures, (b) variation of V o u t 1 as a function of the temperature.
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Figure 15. (a) Variation of the output voltage V o u t 2 as a function of p H for different temperatures, (b) variation of V o u t 2 as a function of the temperature.
Figure 15. (a) Variation of the output voltage V o u t 2 as a function of p H for different temperatures, (b) variation of V o u t 2 as a function of the temperature.
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Table 1. Technological parameters of the simulated macro model.
Table 1. Technological parameters of the simulated macro model.
ParametersValues
V t o : Threshold Voltage ( V )−1.7
φ 0 : Surface Potential ( mV )555
λ 0 : Channel length ( µ m )7.59
C j : Junction Capacity (F/ cm 2 )4.44
C j s w : Junction Sidewall Capacity ( pF / m )515
T o x : oxide thickness ( nm )150
Table 2. Variation of the sensor’s sensitivity according to the temperature’s variation.
Table 2. Variation of the sensor’s sensitivity according to the temperature’s variation.
T (°C)01020304050
Sensitivity (mV/pH)635854514038
Table 3. Comparative study for temperature compensation.
Table 3. Comparative study for temperature compensation.
References [7][44][45]This Work
SimulatorHSPICECadenceHSPICEADS
ProcessMOSIS CMOS (AMI 1.0 µm)AMS (0.35 µm)MOSIS CMOS (AMI 1.0 µm)TSMC (0.18 µm)
Power supply --3.3 V--1.8(V)
Power consumption18.6 (mW)----1.8 (mW)
Temperature range[20 °C, 60 °C]--[20 °C, 120 °C][0 °C, 50 °C]
Temperature coefficient28 ×   10 6 (V/°C)0.25 ×   10 9 (A/°C)23.37 ×   10 6 (pH/°C)5 ×   10 6 (V/°C)
Table 4. Comparative study for overall sensitivity.
Table 4. Comparative study for overall sensitivity.
References[46][47][48]This Work
Process 0.18 µm CMOSSOITSMC (65 nm)TSMC (0.18 µm)
Output signalDigitalAnalogDigitalAnalog
Over all sensitivity (mV/pH)103.8258123.8324
Temperature range------[0 °C, 50 °C]

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Gaddour, A.; Dghais, W.; Hamdi, B.; Ben Ali, M. Temperature Compensation Circuit for ISFET Sensor. J. Low Power Electron. Appl. 2020, 10, 2. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/jlpea10010002

AMA Style

Gaddour A, Dghais W, Hamdi B, Ben Ali M. Temperature Compensation Circuit for ISFET Sensor. Journal of Low Power Electronics and Applications. 2020; 10(1):2. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/jlpea10010002

Chicago/Turabian Style

Gaddour, Ahmed, Wael Dghais, Belgacem Hamdi, and Mounir Ben Ali. 2020. "Temperature Compensation Circuit for ISFET Sensor" Journal of Low Power Electronics and Applications 10, no. 1: 2. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/jlpea10010002

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