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Journal ArticleDOI

CMOS Conductometric System for Growth Monitoring and Sensing of Bacteria

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TLDR
The novelty in the current work lies in the ability of the CMOS sensor system to monitor very low initial concentrations of bacteria (4×102 to 4×104 colony forming unit (CFU)/mL).
Abstract
We present the design and implementation of a prototype complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) conductometric integrated circuit (IC) for colony growth monitoring and specific sensing of Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria. The detection of E. coli is done by employing T4 bacteriophages as receptor organisms. The conductometric system operates by measuring the resistance of the test sample between the electrodes of a two-electrode electrochemical system (reference electrode and working electrode). The CMOS IC is fabricated in a TSMC 0.35-μm process and uses a current-to-frequency (I to F) conversion circuit to convert the test sample resistance into a digital output modulated in frequency. Pulsewidth control (one-shot circuit) is implemented on-chip to control the pulsewidth of the output digital signal. The novelty in the current work lies in the ability of the CMOS sensor system to monitor very low initial concentrations of bacteria (4×102 to 4×104 colony forming unit (CFU)/mL). The CMOS system is also used to record the interaction between E. coli and its specific receptor T4 bacteriophage. The prototype CMOS IC consumes an average power of 1.85 mW with a 3.3-V dc power supply.

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A Label-Free, Non-Intrusive, and Rapid Monitoring of Bacterial Growth on Solid Medium Using Microwave Biosensor

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Camera Phone-Based Quantitative Analysis of C-Reactive Protein ELISA

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Rapid Detection of E. coli Bacteria Using Potassium-Sensitive FETs in CMOS

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References
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TL;DR: The conventional methods, analytical techniques and recent developments in food pathogen detection, identification and quantification, with an emphasis on biosensors are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacteriophage T4 Genome

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Electrical/electrochemical impedance for rapid detection of foodborne pathogenic bacteria

TL;DR: This paper reviews the progress and applications of impedance microbiology for foodborne pathogenic bacteria detection, particularly the new aspects that have been added to this subject in the past few years, including the use of interdigitated microelectrodes, the development of chip-based impedance microbiologists, and theUse of equivalent circuits for analysis of the impedance systems.
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