4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Transimpedance Amplifier for High Sensitivity Current Measurements on Nanodevices

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF SOLID-STATE CIRCUITS
Volume 44, Issue 5, Pages 1609-1616

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSSC.2009.2016998

Keywords

Active resistor; high sensitivity instrumentation; instrument-on-chip; transimpedance amplifier

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The paper presents a very high sensitivity transimpedance amplifier in standard CMOS 0.35 mu m technology suited for sensing current signals from molecular and nanodevices systems. The circuit, based on an integrator followed by a differentiator configuration, features i) a low-noise time-continuous feedback loop to cope with possible standing currents from the device under test as high as few tens of nA without limiting the signal dynamic range; ii) active current-reducers to implement very high value equivalent resistances of hundreds of G Omega with high linearity irrespective to the current direction and characterized by a shot noise current level (2qI) which is, for low standing current, few orders of magnitude smaller than a physical resistor of equal value and iii) nested-Miller compensation networks to ensure strong stability over a bandwidth of few MHz. Thanks to the ability to draw large standing currents, the circuit is suitable for a use in biological systems where physiological medium is co-present. The measured input equivalent noise of 4 fA/root Hz at about 100 kHz, recorded when the input dc current is lower than 10 pA, allows the chip to be used, among others, in impedance spectroscopy measurements at the nanoscale with a capability of detecting capacitance variations in sub-attofarad range to cope with the challenges of single-chip instrumentation.

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