| Literature DB >> 19169827 |
Peter Burke1, Christopher Rutherglen.
Abstract
We present an overview of progress towards single-chip RFID solutions. To date heterogeneous integration has been appropriate for non-biological systems. However, for in-vivo sensors and even drug delivery systems, a small form factor is required. We discuss fundamental limits on the size of the form factor, the effect of the antenna, and propose a unified single-chip RFID solution appropriate for a broad range of biomedical in-vivo device applications, both current and future. Fundamental issues regarding the possibility of single cell RF radios to interface with biological function are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 19169827 PMCID: PMC2896640 DOI: 10.1007/s10544-008-9266-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Microdevices ISSN: 1387-2176 Impact factor: 2.838
Fig. 1Single cell radio concept
Fig. 2Hitachi micro-chip. © 2006 IEEE
Fig. 3On-chip-antenna and Hitachi micro-chip to scale. © 2007 IEEE
Fig. 4Carbon nanotube radio
Estimated circuit, antenna, and system size for various radios complied from the literature
| Circuit size (m3) | Antenna size (m3) | System size | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hitachi | 1E−14 | 1E−08 | 1E−08 |
| UCI CNT Radio | 1E−23 | 1E−05 | 1E−03 |
| France-Telecom | 1E−09 | 1E−09 | 1E−09 |
| Smart Dust | 3.125E−09 | 1E−06 | 1E−06 |
| SMS | NA | NA | 1E−06 |
| BioRasis | NA | NA | 5E−09 |
| ISSYS | NA | NA | 1E−06 |
| Potential single-chip radio | 1E−14 | ||
| Volume of single cell | 1E−18 | ||
| Potential nano radio | 1E−21 |
These are estimates only, as most literature does not specify complete system volume
Fig. 5Sizes of various existing and proposed radios
Fig. 6Carbon nanotube antenna concept
Fig. 7Micro-radio concept
Fig. 8Possible architecture for integrated nanosystems