Source: https://patents.justia.com/patent/20050228313
Timestamp: 2020-08-14 15:38:31
Document Index: 83403773

Matched Legal Cases: ['application No. 60', 'art 1', 'art 5', 'Application No. 20030050602', 'Application No. 20020193754', 'Application No. 2003153900', 'art 2']

US Patent Application for Fluid sampling, analysis and delivery system Patent Application (Application #20050228313 issued October 13, 2005) - Justia Patents Search
Justia Patents US Patent Application for Fluid sampling, analysis and delivery system Patent Application (Application #20050228313)
Dec 3, 2004 - University Technologies International Inc.
The lack of safe, reliable, automated and clinically acceptable blood sampling has been the main problem precluding the development of real-time systems for blood analysis and subsequent closed-loop physiological function control. While the analysis of a static blood sample in laboratory conditions has been rapidly advancing in reliability and blood volume reduction, non-invasive real-time blood analysis performed in vivo (while the blood is circulating in the body) has been elusive and unreliable. In this study we propose an innovative idea for semi-invasive blood sampling and analysis, which resembles the operation of a mosquito. At a miniature scale the proposed system does penetrate the skin to extract a static blood sample for further analysis, but the extent of this penetration, and the fact that it can be made painless, is particularly attractive for such applications as automated glucose analysis for closed-loop control of insulin infusion (artificial pancreas), continuous drug monitoring, or even periodic DNA analysis for security and identification purposes. These design aspects are described, and a specific implementation, applying MEMS (Micro Electro Mechanical Systems) technology, is suggested. The proposed microsystem is a matrix of individually controllable e-Mosquito™ cells, packaged in a disposable patch and attached to the skin, could be an avenue for real-time semi-invasive blood analysis and diagnostics.
This application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of U.S. provisional application No. 60/526,595 filed Dec. 4, 2003.
Blood sampling is essential for diagnosing and testing a wide variety of disorders and medical conditions, as well as for DNA testing, and blood donation screening [1]. Contemporary blood sampling techniques can be generally classified as invasive, implanted and non-invasive [2]. All references in square brackets are listed at the end of the patent disclosure and incorporated by reference herein.
Non-invasive blood sampling and subsequent analysis usually involves optical or ultrasonic tissue interrogation techniques [3], which generally depend on the location and the characteristics of the tissue volume studied. For example, it has been shown that glucose concentration in a given blood volume does have specific optical and ultrasonic signatures [4], and claims have been made that interrogation of the optical or the ultrasonic spectra absorbed or reflected by a tissue volume rich in capillaries could be indicative of glucose concentration dynamics [5]. However, the impact of non-quantifiable external factors (e.g., variable capillary concentration in the interrogated tissue volume, changeable capillary volumes associated with blood pressure dynamics, dynamic absorption capabilities of the surrounding living tissue, etc.), make the reliability, the repeatability and the associated errors of non-invasive blood sampling techniques inadequate to warrant wide-spread and routine utilization [6].
Implantable blood sampling involves the permanent or temporary introduction of a blood-monitoring enclosure inside the body. A variety of electrochemical techniques have been suggested, but the limitations of this approach include foreign-body reactions related to scar tissue buildup around the sensor, and the complexities associated with data transmission from the implant to external data loggers. In important studies, inconsistently decreasing sensor activity has been found in less than 24 hours, questioning the repeatability of this approach even if the signal transmission issues were to be completely resolved [2, 7-9].
To this day, invasive blood sampling techniques remain the most reliable and routinely utilized approach in the clinical practice [1]. Dramatic recent developments in miniaturizing the sampling needles [10-19] and the volume of blood needed for reliable analysis [20] have significantly facilitated this centuries-old approach, and contemporary commercially-available blood monitors have the convenient miniature size of cellular telephones [21, 22]. Nevertheless, needle based blood collection is necessary in order to harvest an adequate volume of blood for analysis and electronic reporting, which presents a significant inconvenience for wide groups of patients and medical professionals alike, such as diabetic patients and laboratory nurses. The risk of infections, and the associated pain and skin irritations should not be underestimated as well.
Many intellectual property instruments (patents and patent applications) have been released on invasive blood sampling [21, 23-29] and on transdermal drug delivery through microneedles [23, 30-32], however these approaches are deficient in automated real-time actuation and control of the microneedle. The skin penetration as well as the extraction of the needle is hence executed manually.
Recent technological improvements in the area of micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) significantly facilitated the development of automated, invasive blood sampling and drug delivery devices. Some references [33, 34] describe an autonomous, ambulatory analyte monitor or drug delivery device [33] or a Microneedle Transdermal Transport Device [34]. These approaches do not present a self-contained, real-time, closed-loop control device, utilizing an integrated microsystem mountable on a disposable adhesive patch, and containing a matrix of individually, but sequentially actuated, single-use elementary cells mounted in a disposable platform such as a self-adhesive patch.
The aims of the present study and patent disclosure are: (1) to suggest a conceptually new, fourth approach in blood sampling, which could be characterized as semi-invasive and is based on a device defined as the Electronic Mosquito or e-Mosquito™; (2) to outline, model and prove feasibility of the e-Mosquito™ building blocks; (3) to present comprehensively the integrated e-Mosquito™ system and demonstrate its principle of operation; (4) to discuss fabrication-related issues related to the proposed design; and (5) to evaluate the capabilities and the limitations of this new approach in blood sampling, glucose monitoring and drug delivery.
The principle of semi-invasive blood sampling could be easily related to the operation of a mosquito, which penetrates the skin to collect a very small volume of blood, with minimal amount of skin irritation. Smooth penetration is ensured because of the jagged shape of the maxilla, and blood transport over relatively long distance is made possible by a feeding pump. Anesthetizing saliva provides for a painless penetration, while the minimal irritation is associated with the anticoagulant used [35] (FIG. 3.1a). The electronic cousin of the mosquito, the e-Mosquito™, somewhat differs from the approach utilized by the real mosquito, although the end result, the acquisition of a blood sample, remains the same (FIG. 3.1b).
The total size of one single e-Mosquito™ may be in the range of a few millimeters and a set of these miniature cells can be applied as a patch on to the skin, similarly to a band-aid. The short microneedle provides completely painless blood sampling. The electrochemical sensors need only a very small blood sample for reliable assessment of blood glucose or other blood parameters, utilizing the collected static blood volume. An antiseptic layer provides minimal risk of infection and skin irritation. The e-Mosquito™ is a single-use device. The device features a real-time monitoring of blood parameters and is capable of sending wirelessly the results either to a remote device with a display (i.e. wrist watch, cell phone, personal digital assistant, etc.) or directly to a medical authority (i.e. hospital, clinic, medical doctor, etc.)
Taking into account the technological complications related to designing a microelectronic “horizontal drilling” setup to mimic the operation performed by the maxilla of the real mosquito (see FIG. 3.1a), a simple vertical penetration was considered. However, the “horizontal drilling” of the mosquito has several important biological advantages, including the possibility to search for arteries or capillaries, and the capability to directly penetrate a vessel, thus extracting maximal blood volume from it. In the case of the e-Mosquito™, however, both of these advantages can be bypassed by (a) introducing a matrix of single-use e-Mosquito™ cells (FIG. 3.2), with the individual actuation of which a direct vertical hit on a capillary by one of the needles becomes inevitable; and (b) reducing the blood volume needed for reliable analysis.
The second major difference between an actual mosquito and its “electronic cousin” is the penetrating depth, which in the latter case is about 400 um, thus ensuring the reach of capillaries but not neural endings, thus providing for a painless operation (FIG. 4.1), and also avoiding the need for accompanying anesthetizing liquid during the bite.
Thirdly, the e-Mosquito™ does not have a feeding pump, but relies on the intricate balance between capillary forces and pressure differences considered during the design process. This intricate balance, combined with the fact that each e-Mosquito™ cell in the matrix is a single-use device, also avoids the use of anticoagulant and alleviates the need to clean individual cells after use, thus keeping the microneedle actuation a sterile one-time event. In other words, each individual e-mosquito cell within the framework of the matrix dies immediately after fulfilling its primary mission, which is to extract a given volume of blood required for reliable stationary blood analysis associated with the particular application of the device. Should a needle from a given cell of the matrix fail to hit a capillary and fulfill its mission, the entire cell is not reused—another cell picks up the mission at a slightly different location.
In addition, penetration of the skin and microneedle withdrawal in the e-Mosquito™ is performed through an antiseptic layer adhesive to the skin, thus avoiding any potential skin irritations or infections.
A new concept of an integrated and automated microsystem for blood sampling, multicomponent blood monitoring and analysis, and drug delivery is presented. Important design parameters have been laid out and quantified to demonstrate the capabilities and limitations of the e-Mosquito™ patch. The building blocks of the e-Mosquito™ cell are outlined, modeled and shown to be feasible to implement. The integrated e-Mosquito™ system is presented comprehensively and its principle of operation is demonstrated illustratively. A realistic fabrication process is described for smooth implementation of the proposed e-Mosquito™ design. Further summary of aspects of the invention is found in the claims, which are incorporated by reference here.
There will now be described preferred embodiments of the invention by way of illustration with reference to the figures, in which the figures listed on the left show the item described on the right in the following:
FIG. 3.1a The Mosquito.
FIG. 3.1b The e-Mosquito™.
FIG. 3.2 The e-Mosquito™ patch.
FIG. 4.1 Layers of the skin and painless microneedle penetration.
FIG. 4.2 Proposed silicon microneedle.
FIG. 4.3 Fluid mechanic phenomena in a circular needle channel.
FIG. 4.4a Actuation principle of a piezoelectric bimorph beam.
FIG. 4.4b Dimensions of the piezoelectric heterogeneous bimorph beam.
FIG. 4.5 Silicon microactuator structure.
FIG. 4.6 ANSYS-based Finite Element Analysis of a Silicon microbridge.
FIG. 4.7 Induced current and blood glucose concentration relationship.
FIG. 4.8 The e-Mosquito™ microsensor structure.
FIG. 4.9 The e-Mosquito™ electrical block diagram.
FIG. 4.10 Individual multiplexed control of a single e-Mosquito™ cell.
FIG. 4.11 Control of a single e-Mosquito™ drug delivery cell.
FIG. 5.1 Exploded 3D view of the e-Mosquito™ building blocks.
FIG. 5.2 Compact 3D view of the e-Mosquito™ building blocks.
FIG. 5.3 2D view of a FEA applied to the e-Mosquito™ assembly.
FIG. 5.4 3D view of a FEA applied to the e-Mosquito™ assembly.
FIG. 5.5 3D top view of the e-Mosquito™ microactuator structure.
FIG. 5.6 3D view of the e-Mosquito™ microsensor structure.
FIG. 5.7 The e-Mosquito™ blood sampling process.
FIG. 5.8 Integration of the single cell into the e-Mosquito™ matrix.
FIG. 5.9 3D bottom view of the e-Mosquito™ matrix.
FIG. 5.10 Exploded 3D view of the e-Mosquito™ patch.
FIG. 5.11 Compact 3D view of the e-Mosquito™ patch.
FIG. 5.12 Attachment of the e-Mosquito™ patch to the shoulder of a subject.
FIG. 6.1 Fabrication steps of the e-Mosquito™ PZT microactuator.
FIG. 6.2 Fabrication steps of the microactuator and the microbridge.
FIG. 6.3 Fabrication steps of the microbridge and the microneedle.
FIG. 6.4 Fabrication steps of the e-Mosquito™ microsensor structure.
FIG. 6.5 Fabrication steps of the e-Mosquito™ microsensor electrodes.
FIG. 6.6 Fabrication steps of the e-Mosquito™ microelectronics.
FIG. 6.7 The individual fabricated e-Mosquito™ building blocks.
FIG. 6.8 The bonded e-Mosquito™ building blocks.
A variety of different approaches have been put forward in designing the microneedles. In terms of fabrication techniques, in-plane [13, 17, 20, 36, 37] and out-of-plane [11, 12, 15, 16, 38-46] solutions have been suggested. Single microneedles are normally produced in-plane, and are much larger in size, while out-of-plane designs are smaller and are routinely fabricated in a matrix. A clear distinction is made between microneedles for drug delivery, and for blood sampling. In-plane needles are efficiently used for blood sampling because of their longer size [13, 20, 36]. With the recognition of the efficacy of subcutaneous drug delivery, out-of-plane microneedles are routinely preferred for that purpose [12, 15, 38, 47].
The human skin is composed of three layers: (1) the stratum corneum is the outermost layer and is made of dead tissues; (2) the epidermis, a tissue of living cells and interstitial plasma, which has a thickness of about 100 um; and (3) the underlying dermis with blood capillaries and nerves [18]. The ultimate goal is to reach the blood vessels without affecting the nerves. In the specific microneedle design for the e-Mosquito™, optimal painless penetration depth of about 400 um for minimally invasive liquid transfer was considered [11, 16, 38, 40] (FIG. 4.1).
Opening a bracket in the overall design discussion, it should be mentioned that the e-Mosquito™ design was implemented keeping in mind potential drug-delivery applications as well. Considering that the pressure needed for routine skin penetration was reported to be 3.138 N/mm2 [47], in the worst case scenario of a needle surface area of 100 um×300 um (0.03 mm2) penetrating the skin up to its base, the required penetration force was estimated to be up to 100 mN. This value represents the maximal force, which the microactuator has to be able to exert in a controlled manner.
Among the various silicon microneedle shapes, the out-of-plane pyramidal side-opened design [16] has been considered beneficial in terms of ease of fabrication, mechanical strength, and avoidance of clogging at the needle tip. Tests on the mentioned design have further shown that blood-like liquids are readily drawn and transported into the needle by capillary forces, thus eliminating the need for any active pumping. Such hollow needles may also be used for transdermal liquid transfer, i.e. for either blood extraction or drug delivery.
The proposed needle design differs only slightly in geometry from the reported pyramidal microneedle [11, 16] and preserves the beneficial characteristics such as high mechanical strength and enhanced fluid mechanics. However, since the microneedle is to be integrated on a microstructure, the fabrication process differs and will be discussed later in this report.
The e-Mosquito™ microneedle (FIG. 4.2) is designed to either sample blood or subcutaneously deliver medication. In order to easily break the stratum corneum, the needle has to be sharp. However, since the mechanical properties of human skin are not sufficiently well characterized or known, precise requirements for the sharpness of the needle are difficult to formulate [48].
There are two possible failure scenarios for the needle: fracture or buckling. Both could occur during the insertion of the needle into the skin. Failure may occur under load, causing either fracture or buckling, whichever is lower. A worst-case estimate of the maximum load, which the needle can withstand can be calculated assuming that the breakage is confined to a region near the microneedle tip. The fracture load can be estimated from:
Pfr=σyA (1)
where Pfr is the critical load, A is the cross-sectional area of the needle, and σy (=7 GPa) is the yield stress of single crystal silicon [49]. Since silicon is not a ductile material, the yield stress is approximately equal to the fracture stress. For this particular needle size, the estimate of fracture force in the region of the orifice at the needle tip is about 6 N, indicating that the microneedle would not break if adequately designed. Failure due to buckling is even less likely to occur, since the shape of the needle is not thin and long, but thick and pyramidal. The thicker the needle, the higher the force required to buckle it [36].
The overall microfluidic characteristics are considered next, while two scenarios of fluid flow through the microneedle are taken into account: (1) during the sampling mode, the blood flows from the needle tip up to the base; and (2) during drug delivery, the fluid flows from the base of the microneedle down towards its tip.
For the blood sampling mode two parameters are important: the pressure difference between the base and the tip, and the capillary forces. While the needle is being inserted into the skin (FIG. 4.3), the pressure p1 at the tip is additive to the interstitial blood pressure pint, which is assumed to be around 25 mmHg [50]. Since the atmospheric pressure patm (˜760 mmHg) is present at both ends, the pressure is higher at the tip which makes the blood flow towards the base.
To calculate the pressure-flow characteristics in the needle channel, the following relationships and assumptions are considered. For a pipe with a circular cross section, assuming laminar flow and a Newtonian fluid (incompressible fluid with constant viscosity), the flow Q is given by the Hagen-Poiseuille equation, Q = π ⁢ ⁢ D 4 128 ⁢ ⁢ µL ⁢ Δ ⁢ ⁢ p ( 2 )
where D is the channel diameter, L is the length of the channel, μ is the viscosity and Δp is the pressure difference [51]. It has to be mentioned, that although blood is generally not a Newtonian fluid it can be regarded as one in the present microfluidic calculations [51]. Substituting specific values into Eq. (2) a flow rate of Q=0.341 ul/s was obtained considering the pressure difference Δp mentioned above. This value implies that the microneedle has to be inserted into the skin for about 4 s to obtain 1 ul of blood, which is approximately the volume needed for an accurate blood glucose sensing using a standard commercially-available technology for the analysis of a static miniature blood drop [22].
Examining the mode of drug delivery, the pressure at the base of the needle p2 has to be higher then the interstitial blood pressure pint to obtain a fluid flow in the opposite direction towards the blood capillaries. Fluidic resistance is an important parameter for the characterization of flow through a channel. It is defined as the ratio of pressure drop Δp over flow rate Q [51] and has to be kept as low as possible for an efficient liquid transfer through the microneedle [41]. A circular cross section, as utilized in the present needle design, exhibits lower resistance then any other type of cross section. The radius of the circular cross section can be related to the average diameter of a red blood cell, which is about 7.5 um [50], restricting the minimal value for the diameter of the microneedle channel. Another limitation when dimensioning a microchannel is the problem of clogging. Generally, it can be assumed, that the smaller the cross-sectional area, the higher the possibility for and the velocity of clogging. Tests on microneedles confirm this assumption and it has been further shown, that a diameter in the range of 50 um is adequate to avoid blood clogging [11, 41].
For a small flow channel, the surface tension force (the capillary force) tends to draw liquid into the channel. The capillary force Fc for a round channel with a diameter D is [51]:
Fc=Dπγ cos (θ) (2)
where γ is the interfacial surface tension and θ is the contact angle between the liquid and the surface. For a vertical channel, the gravitational acceleration g on the rising column of liquid with density ρ and height h, opposes the capillary force Fg, and is given by: F g = D ⁢ ⁢ π ⁢ ⁢ h ⁢ ⁢ ρ ⁢ ⁢ g 4 ( 3 )
Equating these two forces gives the maximum rise of a fluid level h against the gravity: h = 4 ⁢ ⁢ γ ⁢ ⁢ cos ⁢ ⁢ ( θ ) D ⁢ ⁢ ρ ⁢ ⁢ g ( 4 )
In the proposed microneedle channel with a diameter D of 50 um, the blood reaches a height of 57 mm, which is more than enough to extract the blood up from the capillaries into the blood compartment of the e-Mosquito™. In previously designed out-of-plane microneedles with a similar channel radius, liquid presented to the needle base without applying a pressure difference between the two orifices was sucked into the needle channel by capillary forces [11].
The development of MEMS microactuators is still in its infancy mainly because of the initial lack of appropriate applications and the difficulty of reliably relating microactuators to the macroscopic world [52]. Although the earliest microactuators utilized electrostatic forces, devices now exist that are actuated by thermally-controlled shape-memory alloys (SMA), magnetic or piezoelectric forces, just to name a few [53]. Each method has its own advantages, disadvantages and an appropriate set of applications.
When choosing an actuator, the importance of the needed functionality cannot be overemphasized. The most important properties and characteristics that have to be taken into account are the complexity of fabrication, force, pressure, displacement, power consumption, voltage supply, current supply, size, precision, timing, shape and strain. The microactuator for the e-Mosquito™ has to meet at least the following estimated requirements to successfully penetrate the human skin for blood sampling. A large displacement of about 400 um is necessary to introduce the microneedle into its optimal depth without producing pain. A maximal force in the order of 100 mN is required to pierce the upper layers of the skin and to reach the blood capillaries with the specific microneedle design (see Section 4.1). In addition, the actuator should be driven with a low operating voltage in order to be compatible with contemporary microelectronic circuits, and should consume as little power as possible. Since the actuation takes place in a conductive environment, neither the performance of the microactuator, nor the blood parameters should be affected by the type of actuation. Therefore, the actuator has to be biocompatible in conductive fluids. The complexity of fabrication, another very important criterion, should be maintained as low as possible, aiming for a simple and elegant design.
Quantitative investigation of existing actuation types revealed that piezoelectric actuation is favorable in terms of force delivery capability, low complexity, fabrication feasibility, and power efficiency [51-53]. Piezoelectric materials exhibit a change in deformation when an electric field is applied to them. FIG. 4.4(a) illustrates the actuation principle of a silicon bender coated on top with a piezoelectric material. Constituent equations of piezoelectric heterogeneous bimorphs have been used to analyze the geometry of cantilevers coated with piezoelectric materials [54]. The vertical displacement δ and the slope α at the tip of a free bender with a mass m and length l can be calculated as follows: δ = A ⁡ [ ( 4 ⁢ ⁢ l 3 ⁢ m ⁢ ⁢ g K ⁢ ⁢ w ) + ( 3 ⁢ ⁢ d 31 ⁢ B ⁢ ⁢ l 2 ⁢ V K ) ] ( 5 ) α = A ⁡ [ ( 6 ⁢ ⁢ l 2 ⁢ m ⁢ ⁢ g K ⁢ ⁢ w ) + ( 6 ⁢ ⁢ d 31 ⁢ B ⁢ ⁢ l ⁢ ⁢ V K ) ] ( 6 )
with the substitutions: A = s 11 s ⁢ ⁢ i ⁢ s 11 p ⁡ ( s 11 p ⁢ h si + s 11 si ⁢ h p ) , ( 7 ) B = h si ⁡ ( h si + h p ) ( s 11 p ⁢ h si + s 11 si ⁢ h p ) ( 8 ) and K = 4 ⁢ s 11 p ⁢ s 11 si ⁢ h si ⁡ ( h p ) 3 + 4 ⁢ s 11 p ⁢ s 11 si ⁡ ( h si ) 3 ⁢ h p + ( s 11 p ) 2 ⁢ ( h si ) 4 + ( 9 ) ⁢ ( s 11 si ) 2 ⁢ ( h p ) 4 + 6 ⁢ ⁢ s 11 p ⁢ s 11 si ⁡ ( h si ) 2 ⁢ ( h p ) 2
In these equations the subscripts ‘si’ and ‘p’ denote the elastic silicon layer and the piezoelectric thin film respectively, while d31, s11, h, g, m and l are the piezoelectric coefficient, the compliance, the layer thickness, the gravitational acceleration constant, the mass of the needle and the cantilever length, respectively. The subscripted numbers i and j (i.e. dij, sij, etc.) indicate the direction of the applied electric field and the direction of the resulting normal strain, respectively. The compliance s11 is the reciprocal value of the Young's Modulus E. Equations (5) and (6) depend on two external factors: (1) the passive load (weight) of the microneedle; and (2) the voltage V (or electric field) which is applied to the piezoelectric layer. For small displacements, the vertical deflection is linearly proportional to the electric field E3=−V/hp that is used to electrically stress the piezoelectric layer between its upper and lower surface. A more efficient way to affect the vertical displacement δ is by increasing the length l of the beam.
The lateral force Fl produced at the cantilever-tip by applying an electric field is calculated as follows: F l = d 31 ⁢ V ⁢ ⁢ w ⁢ ⁢ h s ⁢ ⁢ i ⁢ ⌊ s 11 s ⁢ ⁢ i ⁡ ( h p ) 3 + s 11 p ⁡ ( h s ⁢ ⁢ i ) 3 ⌋ K ( 10 )
The vertical force F, which is the force required to penetrate the skin, is calculated multiplying the lateral force Fl with the sine of the deflection angle α (see FIG. 4.4(a)). The relationship in Eq. (10) indicates that increasing the horizontal width w increases the actuation force at the tip of the cantilever. The same effect takes place when the applied voltage V is increased.
Table 4.1 illustrates different piezoelectric thin film materials, their piezoelectric coefficient d31, the Young's Modulus E and the compliance s11 [52, 55].
Properties of thin-film piezoelectric materials.
d31 E s11 Material [pm/V] [MPa] [1/MPa]
Aluminium Nitride (AlN) −2 345 0.003 Zinc Oxide (ZnO) −5 123 0.008 Polyvinylidene Fluoride (PVDF) −23 3 0.33 Lead Zirconium Titanate (PZT) −170 53 0.02
Lead Zirconium Titanate (PZT) is widely used as a transducer material and finds many applications in the Microactuation-Technology. In terms of large displacement, PZT is preferred because of its very high piezoelectric coefficient d31. The principle disadvantage of using PZT is the complexity associated with its reliable deposition and fabrication [56]. Solving Eq. (5) numerically with beam dimensions of l=4000 um, w=400 um, his=15 um and hp=5 um, using the materials PZT and silicon (E=165 GPa, [49]) and applying 60V resulted in a deflection of δ=550 um at the tip of the cantilever. The resulting angle (see Eq. (6)) at the tip was calculated to be α=16° and the resulting force F=45 mN. Scaling down the layer thickness his and hp to 7 um and 1 um respectively, no more than 10V are needed to obtain a deflection δ of 500 um but with a resulting force of about 10 mN. A low driving voltage is preferred for a better integration and compatibility with contemporary CMOS technology. The contribution of the mass mN of the microneedle in terms of deflection and force is minimal. In the idle state, the deflection due to the passive load gmN was calculated to be no more than 0.5 um.
It has been shown [57] that optimal efficiency in power occurs, when the silicon layer thickness his is designed about 1.5 to 2 times larger then the piezoelectric layer hp. For this particular design however, it has been calculated, that for an optimal force-displacement relationship, the silicon layer has to be between 3 to 7 times thicker then the piezoelectric layer.
FIG. 4.5 demonstrates the actuation design of the e-Mosquito™. The bridge configuration compared to a single beam configuration features an elegant solution to integrate the blood compartment on top of the microbridge (see FIG. 3.1). This avoids the problematic guiding of the blood from the needle base to a separate blood compartment through a microchannel.
The microbridge (A1) bonds the two actuation beams (A2) together forming a microbridge. The microneedle (see Section 4.1) is implemented on the lower side of the microbridge and moves towards the skin in vertical direction when the benders are actuated. A vertical aperture in the microbridge with the diameter D (same as the microneedle diameter) permits the blood to flow through the needle into the compartment. During the actuation of the two benders, the connector is exposed to longitudinal and perpendicular stress. Therefore, it has to meet the following requirements: (1) it has to be horizontally flexible enough not to inhibit significantly the vertical deflection of the two benders, but on the other hand, (2) it has to withstand the force acting vertically from the microneedle as well as the horizontal stress from the benders.
The ANSYS software program [58] was used in conjunction with SolidWorks [59] to simulate the behavior of the microbridge under structural loading conditions. An ANSYS-based automated Finite Element Analysis (FEA) was performed to generate the results listed below (FIG. 4.6).
The following material properties of silicon [49] were utilized during the analysis: Young's Modulus of 150 GPa, yield stress of 7 GPa, Poisson's ratio of 0.278, and mass density of 2330 kg/m3. The maximal stress measured in the beam was 0.426 GPa which is safely below the yield stress (safety factor of 16.43), and therefore indicates that the beam won't break under a deformation of about 500 um.
Although this section was focused on piezoelectric actuation, it should be mentioned here that magnetic, thermal and electrostatic actuation were explored as well as a solution to actuate the microneedle. Particularly of interest for this application is the thermal actuation principle, being advantageous in (1) the manifestation of large displacements; (2) consuming a low operating voltage; and (3) being relatively straightforward to fabricate. Thermal actuation however has the drawback of operating under high temperatures and is therefore unlikely to be biocompatible when in contact with blood or medications. Other less applicable techniques for the motion-control of the e-Mosquito™ microneedle would be magnetic and electrostatic actuation.
The glucose microsensor for the e-Mosquito™ is an electrochemical transducer in which current is converted from the chemical domain into the electrical domain through oxidation or reduction of at the electrode surface. With the basic transducer being a small metal electrode insulated everywhere except at a specific location on which the chemical reactions take place, several electrochemical analytical and synthetic systems can be implemented. The type of electrode sensor is differentiated on the basis of the electrical parameter that is measured. In the case of glucose measurements, potentiometric and amperometric sensors can be utilized [51]. Current research shows that amperometry is more popular than potentiometry for the design of glucose biosensors [60-64]. This is mainly because the detecting functions of amperometry are based on the usage of an enzyme that has the advantage of fair simplicity, high selectivity, good sensitivity and a large dynamic range [60].
When considering the chemical reactions pertinent to the amperometry scheme, the chemical processes can be accomplished using an external voltage source. Such implementation can reduce the impact of external disturbing factors like oxygen [65]. Using advanced measurement procedures and digital signal processing methods, linear measurable range can be defined for normal subjects and diabetics with blood glucose in the range of 0.17-2.22 mM [66].
Amperometry employs the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOD) to convert the chemical reaction rate into a current. The use of GOD for glucose detection is well known, and is a common biosensor application [51]. An example of an amperometric biosensor is presented in an important study [67], where a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) matrix was used to apply GOD to a Platinum (Pt) working electrode. A thick-film Silver (Ag) reference electrode was used. In the presence of oxygen, glucose present in the blood is oxidized:
glucose+O2→gluconolactone+H2O2 (11)
The Pt electrode is held at a potential of 0.7V with respect to the Ag electrode, and thus any hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) present is oxidized, releasing hydrogen ions and causing a current to flow:
H2O2→O2+2H++2e− (12)
By measuring the current, the glucose concentration can be determined. Referring to Eq. 12, one molecule of glucose being oxidized by a commonly-used two-electrode electrochemical cell results in the emission of 2 free electrons. The induced current Ii can be derived according to the following equation [60]: I i = n ⁢ ⁢ F ⁢ ⁢ A ⁢ ⁢ D ⁢ ∂ [ O ] ∂ x ( 13 )
where n is the number of electrons transferred in the reaction (valence number), F is the Faraday constant, A is the area of the electrodes, D is the diffusion coefficient of the species of interest, O is the concentration of oxygen and x is the distance between the electrodes.
To define the dimensions of the microsensor of the e-Mosquito™, the dynamic range of the induced current Ii from the chemical reaction on a tiny enzymatic area is considered first. FIG. 4.7 shows the relationship between the induced current Ii and the blood glucose concentration on an area of A=20 mm2 [60]. It can be observed, that the dynamic range of the induced current Ii is from 0 to 12.5 uA.
When considering the constraints of the microcircuit design and practical glucose measurements, the enzymatic area cannot be too small. Assuming, that the effective blood-exposed working-electrode (Pt) area of the e-Mosquito™ compartment is in the range of 4×0.06 mm2 (FIG. 4.8), the induced current Ii can be linearly scaled down, according to Eq. 13, to a range of 0 to 1.5 μA.
FIG. 4.8 illustrates the main parts of the e-Mosquito™ microsensor. Ion-Sensitive Field Emission Transistors (ISFETs) are envisioned to implement the microsensor electrodes. The wall dimensions of the blood compartment coincide with the length and the width of the microactuator (discussed in Section 4.2) for optimal integration.
The output signal of the glucose microsensor is a current I approximately in the range between 0 and 1.5 μA. This current has to be conditioned by several electrical stages to be read remotely as a glucose concentration on a display. FIG. 4.9 illustrates in a block diagram these electrical stages.
The rectangular blocks (E01-E14) in FIG. 4.9 represent electrical stages, of which (E01-E04) and (E11-E14) are physically part of the e-Mosquito™ system. The electrical stages (E05-E10) belong physically to a remote controlling device (i.e. watch, cell phone, personal digital assistant, etc.).
A single e-Mosquito™ cell is selected by decoding, and actuation is initiated, resulting in the acquisition of a blood sample, which is sensed by the glucose microsensor. The current I resulting from the microsensor operation is converted in the first stage (E01) into a voltage vs. The sensor voltage vs is very small, and has therefore to be amplified and conditioned in the second stage (E02). In this stage a comparator is included as well, comparing the obtained voltage to a predetermined minimal level to ensure that a meaningful glucose reading has been indeed provided by the microsensor. The resulting analog voltage Vs is converted into a digital signal in stage three (E03). The RF transmitter, denoted as stage four (E04), captures the digital signal (0-1) to transmit it wirelessly (maximal range of 5 m) to the RF receiver (E05) of the remote device. In the remote device, a data logger (E06) sends the signal to a microcontroller (E07), from which the processed signal is delivered to a display (E08) and is finally read as a glucose concentration. The eighth stage (E08) completes the blood sampling process and closes the glucose-monitoring loop. In addition, the microcontroller output is utilized to close the insulin control loop by controlling an external insulin infusion pump (E09) or by simply transmitting control sequence through the RF transmitter (E10) back to the on-chip microelectronic control of the e-Mosquito™ to actuate dedicated drug-delivery cells in it.
Upon completion of the blood sampling and glucose concentration reading, the remote microcontroller (E07) decides when to issue another actuation signal to a different e-Mosquito™ cell. Two scenarios are possible: (a) if the current glucose-reading has been successful, the next actuation is preprogrammed to occur according to a specific protocol designed for the individual patient utilizing the e-Mosquito™ patch; or (b) in case of unsuccessful readout from the particular e-Mosquito™ cell, another actuation of a new cell is immediately initiated. It should be emphasized once again that each individual e-Mosquito™ cell is actuated only once and re-actuations are not envisioned.
The actuation signal is wirelessly transmitted (maximal range of 5 m) to the RF receiver (E11), which is placed in the e-Mosquito™. An on-chip microcontroller (E12) receives the incoming feedback signal and controls the actuation of the next e-Mosquito™ cell. The microcontroller (E12) is remotely programmable to control not only the actuation, but also the transmission of the conditioned analog voltage Vs representing the sensed blood glucose level to the analog-to-digital converter (E03). FIG. 4.10 details the on-chip operation of an individual e-Mosquito™ cell and its interrelation with adjacent cells.
The serially-obtained analog signals from different e-Mosquito™ cells are multiplexed to the input of the A/D converter (E03) via a wired-OR setup facilitated by CMOS switches (E17), controlled by the logical combination of three distinct sources: (1) the inverted microcontroller signal (E15) initiating the actuation; (2) a timing signal generated by the microcontroller (E12) and initiated after the completion of the actuation of the [k−1]th e-Mosquito™ cell; and (3) a comparator signal originating from the conditioning circuit (E02), indicating that the measured voltage has reached a given predetermined level thus ensuring that the blood sampling from the particular cell has been successful. These three signals are grouped in an AND logic (E16) to close the normally opened CMOS switch (E17) of the kth e-Mosquito™ cell, thus providing an input to the A/D converter (E03). At the same time the respective CMOS switches of all other e-Mosquito™ cells remain opened, thus implementing the wired-OR multiplexing.
Ideally, all on-chip e-Mosquito™ microelectronics is implemented using Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) level design. However, discrete electronic implementation is also possible, particularly for feasibility studies.
The electronic implementation and control of the e-Mosquito™ drug delivery system operates similarly, with the major difference of having the microactuator inserting the microneedle into the skin to inject insulin or a medical remedy instead of sampling blood (FIG. 4.11).
For the e-Mosquito™, electrical energy is required to operate the microactuator, the microsensor, the microelectronics and the microtransceiver. MEMS pose a genuine challenge for energy management. With the present technology, energy must be supplied from outside sources, such as a battery or DC power supply and the power loss during the transmission into the circuit can be very large [68]. For MEMS which are intended to be autonomous or remote (i.e., physically unattached to a power source), the power supply has presented the biggest challenge [69, 70]. The battery is usually the largest contributor to both the overall weight and the volume of the MEMS device [70].
Microscopic energy storage is possible in a variety of forms. Authors of an important paper [70] surveyed a range of possibilities for powering MEMS, including mechanical energy, magnetic or electrical fields, chemical energy, radiative energy and even fission reactors (fission releases neutrons, radiation and energy in the form of heat). They concluded that the most promising energy storage options for MEMS devices would be microscopic batteries and electrical/magnetic field devices (such as capacitors). Capacitors have a long life, but their energy densities are low. Fuel cells are possible, but the storage and delivery of fuel is problematic. Realistically, batteries can provide adequate power and energy for the present application.
The battery for the e-Mosquito™ needs to meet the following criteria: (1) the process used to implement the battery must be a part of a multifunctional, integrated device development process; (2) the battery must not have excessive volume or weight; (3) it must store high energy and power density and be capable of delivering short pulses of high power for the actuation; (4) in order to manage changes in temperature, pressure and humidity without major performance degradation, the battery must be very robust.
In order to determine the approximate total power consumption of the e-Mosquito™ and choose its optimal energy source, the following functional building blocks of the e-Mosquito™ are modeled separately as a power consuming component: (1) the microactuator; (2) the microsensor; the (3) analog conditioning stage (E01-E03); (4) the RF transceiver (E04&E11); (5) the controlling microelectronics (E12); and (6) the voltage booster (E14).
For the microactuation a static voltage supply VA equal to 10V is assumed. In order to calculate the power PA1 consumed by one PZT actuation beam on the bridge, the following equation is applied: P A1 = V A 2 R A ( 14 )
where RA is the resistance of the piezoelectric material (PZT). The resistance RA can be calculated applying the following formula: R A = ρ ⁢ ⁢ h p l ⁢ ⁢ w ( 15 )
where ρ=10.38 Ωm [71] is the resistivity of PZT, hp=5 um, l=4000 um and w=400 um are the thickness, length and the width of the PZT plate, respectively (see FIG. 4.4(b)). Solving these equations numerically, and multiplying the power consumption PA1 by the factor of two, since there are two PZT plates on the bridge, the power consumption for one single actuation is PA=0.126 uW. With this information, the current IA that flows vertically between the upper and the lower surface of the PZT plate can be calculated as follows: I A = P A V A ( 16 )
The resulting current of a single actuation is hence IA=12.6 nA. It is assumed that the e-Mosquito™ patch (see Section 3) has 180 independently actuated cells and therefore the total amount of current IA180 that flows resulting from actuation, is calculated as 2.27 uA. The capacity QA resulting from the actuation can be formulated with the following equation:
QA=IAtA (17)
with tA=4 s being the time for actuation. The total capacity QA resulting from an actuation equals to 0.455 uAh, which is relatively low.
For the quantification of the capacity QS consumed by the e-Mosquito™ microsensor, the current Is resulting from a single sensor, is assumed to be equal to its induced current Ii (see Section 4.3). The time ts utilized to measure the glucose concentration is assumed to be around 60 s [72] and therefore the total capacity QS consumed for glucose sensing can be calculated applying again Eq. 17 as 0.81 mAh.
The analog signal conditioning stage (E01-E03) foreseen for the e-Mosquito™ is driven with 3V, utilizes a supply current ICon of 1 mA during its operational time tCon, which is presumed to be around 20 s per e-Mosquito™ cell. The standby current ICstby used by the conditioner while the device is inactive, is denoted as 10 μA. The duration is tSTBY and consequently the total capacity QC consumed by the analog signal conditioner (E01-E03) can be estimated to be around 2.60 mAh.
The RF transceiver (E04 and E11) envisioned for the e-Mosquito™ is operated with 3V, and utilizes a supply current ITon of 5.3 mA during its operational time tTon, which is assumed to be around 5 s per e-Mosquito™ cell. The standby current ITstby consumed by the transceiver while the device is idle is about 1.7 μA. This duration tSTBY is assumed to be a week or 168 h and therefore the total capacity QT consumed by the RF transceiver (E04&E11) can be estimated to be around 1.61 mAh.
The microcontroller (E12) envisioned for the e-Mosquito™ is operated with 3V, and utilizes a supply current IMon of 3 mA during its operational time tMon, which is assumed to be around 10 s per e-Mosquito™ cell. The standby current IMstby consumed by the microcontroller while the device is idle, is about 9 μA. Again, the duration equals to tSTBY and hence the total capacity QM consumed by the microcontroller (E12) can be estimated to be approximately 3.17 mAh.
The voltage booster (E14) foreseen for the e-Mosquito™ is driven with 3V, and utilizes a supply current IBon of 50 mA during its activate time tBon being 4 s per e-Mosquito™ cell (equal to actuation time tA). The standby current IBstby during the time tSTBY is estimated at about 10 μA. The total capacity QB consumed by the voltage booster (E14) is therefore estimated to be in the range of 10.68 mAh.
The microelectronic block is considered to be with 70% efficiency (a rather conservative estimation), calculated from the total energy consumption. Microbatteries which are as small as 29×22 mm2 in area, 0.44 mm in height and 0.6 g in weight have become recently commercially available [73]. These cells have a nominal voltage of 3V and a capacity of 25 mAh. The energy density reaches up to 110 Wh/kg. Based on the above considerations, these microbatteries are quite suitable for the e-Mosquito™ application.
The building blocks of the e-Mosquito™ that were outlined in Section 4 have to be assembled and incorporated into a complete integrated microsystem. The nomenclature is kept constant during the entire section to improve the readers understanding. The x-y-z triad at the bottom left of the 3D figures illustrate the actual position in space of the device referring to the x-y-z coordinate system.
FIG. 5.1 shows an exploded view of the e-Mosquito™ identifying its most important components. The microsensor structure (S) and the microactuator structure (A) are partly dissected at the side walls to better illustrate their design. The microelectronic block (E) as well as the microbattery (B) are only laid out symbolically, for more details refer to Sections 4.4 and 4.5, respectively. The antiseptic layer (F) is adhesively coated to promote secure adhesion to the skin surface. The purpose of this attachment is to inhibit any bacterial or viral contaminants to enter the e-Mosquito™ environment resulting in (a) probable inadequate measurements of the microsensor, (b) potential clogging of any micro orifices (i.e. microneedle orifice, the pressure gaps, etc) in the e-Mosquito™ structure, and (c) latent transcutaneous infection of the subject carrying the device. The thickness (hF) of the adhesive film is in the range of 0.1 mm. The heights of the microactuator (hA) and the microsensor (hS) structure are 0.5 mm each. The height of the microbattery (hB) is 0.44 mm (see Section 4.5) and the height of the microelectonic building block (hE) is in the range of 0.5 mm if a VLSI design is implemented, or 3 mm if assembled using discrete components.
FIG. 5.2 presents a compact version of FIG. 5.1 and elucidates how the assembled e-Mosquito™ looks like. The total height (H) of the e-Mosquito™ is the sum of the building block heights (hj) and is consequently in the range of 2 mm for a VLSI version, or about 6 mm for a discrete component version.
The first step of assembling the e-Mosquito™ is to integrate the microneedle, the microactuator and the microsensor into one working part. FIG. 5.3 presents a 2D view of these three elements and illustrates clearly the blood sampling action performed by the e-Mosquito™.
In order to model the actuation and subsequent penetration of e-Mosquito™ as accurate as possible, an ANSYS simulation environment was developed with the following parameters: The microneedle (N) as well as the microbridge (A1) were associated with the material properties of silicon (see Section 4.2). The skin and the adhesive and antiseptic layer (F) were modeled with the mechanical properties of human skin [74] (Young's Modulus: 333 MPa; Yield Stress: 1.7 MPa; Poisson's Ratio: 0.3; and Mass Density: 1100 kg/m3). The sidewalls (Y) of the microactuator structure and the microsensor structure respectively, were mechanically fixed for the purposes of the simulation. A vertical force of 25 mN was applied (X) on top of the microbridge. FIG. 5.4 shows a three-dimensional simulation model of the e-Mosquito™.
The results of this simulation show that (a) the microneedle successfully penetrates skin to a depth of 500 μm without fracturing; and (b) the safety factor for the entire assembly is in the range of 23 and hence withstands the large displacement.
FIGS. 5.3 and 5.4 illustrate the principle of operation of the e-Mosquito™. The actuation duration tA is time-controlled and is in the range of 4 s. It is estimated, based on the volume V=1.44 μl of the blood compartment and the microfluidic calculations outlined in Section 4.1, resulting in a flow rate through the microneedle of Q=0.341 μl/s.
During the microactuation step, blood enters into the blood compartment (S1). In order to avoid blood leak through the microbridge (A1) and the actuator side wall (A5) into the actuator compartment (A6), the gaps between the microbridge and the side wall, labeled side gaps (A4) have to be very small. In order to benefit from the surface tension of the blood (see Section 4.1) between the actuator side-wall (A5) and the microbridge, the side-gaps have to be 5 um or smaller, to avoid any leakage of blood from the compartment.
FIG. 5.5 illustrates a three-dimensional view of the microactuator structure (A) and the partially visible actuator compartment (A6). The actuator orifice (A3) has the same diameter (D) (see Section 4.1) as the microneedle and is precisely aligned with it to facilitate continuous blood flow from the microneedle (N) into the blood compartment (S1).
The purpose of the microvalve (S2) is: (a) to maintain a sealed and sterile blood compartment (S1) that is isolated from the surrounding environment throughout the idle period; and (b) to maintain the air pressure equilibrium between the blood compartment and its surroundings during the actuation time ta. This is accomplished with the two pressure gaps (S3) illustrated in FIG. 5.6.
The tiny dimensions of the pressure gaps (S3) are in the range of 5 μm allowing the air to pass, but inhibiting the blood in the compartment (S1) to leak (refer to the blood-related microfluidic calculations in Section 4.1). The two pressure gaps connect the blood compartment (S1) and the air-channels (S6) during the period of actuation. The air-channels have a width of 100 μm, a depth of 20 μm and are implemented on the top of the microsensor structure (S). The channels are sealed on top with the microelectronic building block (E), but are left open at the edges to interface to an air channel network through the entire e-Mosquito™ matrix. This air channel network provides an atmospheric pressure environment and therefore facilitates to the elimination of pressure gradients during the actuation.
FIG. 5.7 summarizes in six distinct instances (I-VI) the principle of operation of the e-Mosquito™ blood sampling procedure. Instance (I) illustrates an e-Mosquito™ cell while it is idle. This state lasts as long as there is no electrical voltage applied to its PZT microactuators (A2). When actuation is administrated (II) under the control of an on-chip microcontroller, the microbridge bends (refer to Section 4.2) and drives the microneedle (N) vertically down towards the skin by piercing through the adhesive & antiseptic layer (F). The antiseptic layer minimizes infections as well as irritations at the skin surface of the subject and seals the actuator compartment (A6) and therefore the entire e-Mosquito™ from its surrounding environment while the device is in the idle state (I). In instance (III), the microbridge (A1) reaches its maximal displacement positioning the tip of the microneedle (N) at a depth of approximately 500 um underneath the surface of the skin. Capillary forces and interstitial pressure (see Section 4.1) facilitate blood flow into the e-Mosquito™ blood compartment (S1). At instance (IV), the voltage continues to be applied to the PZT microactuator (A2), and the microneedle (N) is maintained at its maximal penetration depth. When the compartment (S1) is about to be filled up with blood (V), the actuation voltage is removed, the microbridge bends towards its initial position (I) and hence the microneedle (N) is pulled out of the skin. The actuation time ta between instances (II) and (V) is approximately 4 s (refer to Section 4.1), which depends on the blood flow rate through the microneedle. In instance (VI), the microbridge (A1) and the microneedle (N) are again in their initial position (I) leaving the blood compartment filled with blood, thus concluding the e-Mosquito™ blood sampling process.
A similar process can be utilized for drug delivery, with the actuation being applied on the top of the compartment, which would in this case contain the drug to be delivered, rather then being used for blood collection.
The next level of integration and assembly of the e-Mosquito™ is introduced as follows. The microactuator structure (A), microneedle (N) and microsensor structure (S) are brought together to a structure “single e-Mosquito™ cell” (C). This single e-Mosquito™ cell is then assembled into an entire network forming the complete “e-Mosquito™ matrix” (M). FIG. 5.8 illustrates the single e-Mosquito™ cell (C) and the entire e-Mosquito™ matrix (M).
The dimensions of the e-Mosquito™ matrix (M) depend mainly on the dimensions of a single e-Mosquito™ cell. The height (hSA) of the matrix equals to the sum of the height of the microsensor structure (hS), and the height of the microactuator structure (hA), respectively. The dimensions of the e-Mosquito™ matrix are shown in FIG. 5.9.
The length and width of the e-Mosquito™ matrix are denoted as L3 and W60 respectively, given that three single e-Mosquito™ cells (C) are assembled along L3 and 60 cells are assembled along its width W to build a matrix of 180 individually actuated e-Mosquito™ cells (C). Substituting the dimensions numerically, the e-Mosquito™ matrix has a square area of 900 mm2 with a length (L3) of 30 mm, a width (W60) of 30 mm and a height (hSA) of 1 mm. Each e-Mosquito™ is individually controlled by the microelectronic block (E) and powered by the microbattery (B). An example of the individual e-Mosquito™ actuation is illustrated in FIG. 3.2.
The e-Mosquito™ matrix as shown in FIG. 5.9, is integrated into an “e-Mosquito™ patch” (see FIG. 5.10), which includes the antiseptic film (F), the microelectronics (E), the microbattery (B), the housing (G) and the Band-Aid (P). FIG. 5.10 illustrates the exploded view of the e-Mosquito™ patch.
The microelectronics (E) is shown as a building block of the e-Mosquito™ patch and includes all relevant electronic components (i.e. microcontroller, signal conditioner, A/D converter, RF transceiver, high voltage charge pump, etc.) outlined in Section 4.4. The design of the microelectronic block (E) can be (1) either entirely VLSI-based, (2) with discrete components, or (3) a hybrid of the two. The dimensions of the microelectronics block (E) are more then sufficient to incorporate all the necessary electronic circuitry to actuate and control the e-Mosquito™ patch.
The characteristics and dimensions of the microbattery (B) are outlined in Section 4.5. The adhesive Band-Aid (P) and the housing (G) are building blocks that haven't been discussed yet. The housing is essentially a hollow box made out of durable plastic material with the purpose to protect the very delicate MEMS device inside. It has a wall thickness of approximately 1 mm to withstand the rough environment on the skin of a human being. The height hG of the housing is consequently constituted by the height H of the e-Mosquito™ (refer to FIG. 5.2) plus the thickness of the housing wall (=1 mm) resulting in hG, which numerically equals to 3 mm for the VLSI version, or 7 mm for the discrete-component version. The height hP of the Band-Aid (P) above the skin surface equals to the total height of the e-Mosquito™ patch above the skin surface and depends on the thickness of the used Band-Aid, it can though be roughly assumed that hP is in the range of 3.5 mm, or 7.5 mm for the discrete-component version. A three-dimensional view of the e-Mosquito™ patch being attached to the skin is given in FIG. 5.11.
With the e-Mosquito™ matrix (M) being 30×30 mm2, the dimensions of the entire e-Mosquito™ patch is in the maximal range of 50×50 mm2. An example showing possible attachment of the e-Mosquito™ on a person is illustrated in FIG. 5.12.
The region of attachment of the e-Mosquito™ patch should be an area which has high blood circulation (i.e. skeletal muscle) and where the circulation comes close to the skin surface. A possible region that meets these requirements is the deltoid muscle which encompasses the shoulder bones.
The fabrication and assembly process of the e-Mosquito™ is divided into the fabrication steps (I-V). Step (I) outlines the microfabrication of the e-Mosquito™ microactuator (A) including the microneedle (N). The manufacturing of the e-Mosquito™ microsensor (S) is illustrated in step (II), while step (III) demonstrates the fabrication of the e-Mosquito™ microelectronics (E). The bonding of the three building blocks (AN, S, and E) is discussed in step (IV) and the final assembly with the remaining parts including the microbattery (B), the adhesive layer (F), the housing (G) and the Band-Aid (P) are outlined in step (V). The wide arrows in the figures illustrate, whether (1) material is either removed (etched) from the wafer (arrow departs from the wafer), or (2) material is added (deposited) onto the wafer (arrow arrives to the wafer). The e-Mosquito™ figures shown in this section illustrate the microfabrication process and are not to be scaled.
The next deposited layer (I4) is again metal (Pt/Au), which forms the upper electrode of the piezoelectric actuator. On top of this electrode, an insulating material (silicon nitride) is deposited (I5) to protect from the high voltage that is applied to the upper electrode. Step (I6) illustrates a reactive ion etching (RIE) process, in which (1) the orifice of the microneedle (N) is pre-etched (arrow in the center) and (2) the actuator side walls (A5) are separated from the microbridge (A1). Up to step (I6) all the fabrication procedures take place on the immediate surface of the wafer. In step (I7), the bottom of the wafer is bulk-etched using DRIE, resulting in a microbridge and a square microstructure with an orifice. Since the microneedle orifice is pre-etched in step (I6), the same etch-depth for the orifice and the bridge can be utilized in (I7). In order to obtain the sharp tip of the microneedle (N), anisotropic etching is employed in step (I8) resulting in the final design marked as (AN).
To summarize, procedure (I) is a combination of surface-micromachining (I1-I6) and bulk-micromachining (I7-I8), applied to manufacture the e-Mosquito™ microactuator (A) and the microneedle (N).
The fabrication of the e-Mosquito™ microsensor (S) is outlined in the next procedure (II) and illustrated in FIGS. 6.4 and 6.5. Again, a single crystal silicon (SCS) wafer with a thickness of 500 um is utilized (III), for the manufacturing of the microsensor structure (S). The first step is the removal (RIE) of Silicon (II2) to form the future micro air channels (S6) on top of the structure (S). The second step (II3) is to pre-etch to a certain depth the electrical connection pathways to the microsensor electrodes (S4) and to the microactuator electrodes (A2).
The purpose of the holes pre-etched in (II3) and completely etched from the opposite side of the wafer (II4) are to connect electrically the e-Mosquito™ microelectronics (E) with the microsensor structure (S) and the microactuator structure (A). The outermost two holes connect the microactuator electrodes (A2), and the two holes nearest to the center electrically connect the microsensor electrodes (S4). The hole etched through the vertical centre of the structure forms the pressure gap (S3). In step (II4), a DRIE process is used to bulk micromachine the e-Mosquito™ blood-compartment (S1), as well as the e-Mosquito™ microvalve (S2). The deposition of the microsensor electrodes (S4) is further signalized in step (II5), and (S) illustrates the complete e-Mosquito™ microsensor structure (S).
The fabrication of the e-Mosquito™ microelectronics (E) is the next fabrication procedure to be tackled (III), and is illustrated in FIG. 6.6. For the microelectronic VLSI chip, a thin silicon wafer (200 um) is chosen, since (1) a high aspect ratio is not an issue for microelectronic circuits; (2) the distance of the micro connection lines (micro buses) has to be short to avoid loses and noise; and (3) the overall height of the e-Mosquito™ patch has to be kept as small as possible. Four feed through holes are etched (III2), which facilitate electrical contact to the microelectronic components (E) with the microactuator (A) and the microsensor (S). Step (III) illustrates the sub-assembly of the VLSI system onto the wafer. The schematic of the e-Mosquito™ microelectronics (E) is included at the bottom of FIG. 6.6.
The micromachining of the three most important building blocks (AN, S, and E) of the e-Mosquito™ system have been outlined. The next procedure (IV) is their assembly to form an integrated microsystem. FIG. 6.7 illustrates the assembly of the three e-Mosquito™ building blocks.
The three structures are assembled and fixtured using a low temperature wafer-bonding process. The cross-sectional view of the final (AN, S, E) assembly is shown in FIG. 6.8.
The three-wafer fabrication procedure (I-IV), outlined above is advantageous in many ways. One of the most important benefits is its compatibility with the implementation of the e-Mosquito™ matrix (see Section 5). A silicon wafer containing a matrix of microsensors (S) is aligned and bonded on top of a wafer holding a matrix of microactuators (A), with the same characteristics as outlined in procedure (I) and (II). A third wafer containing the microelectronics (E) (see process (III)) is then implemented on top of the wafer containing the matrix of microsensor structures (S), similarly to the outlined procedure (IV).
Immaterial modifications may be made to the embodiments described here without departing from the invention. Claim elements are understood to refer to the embodiments disclosed and their equivalents now known or hereinafter developed. The use of the word “comprising” or the indefinite article “a” in the claims is not intended to exclude other elements being present.
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2. An automated closed-loop real-time microsystem for fluid sampling, multicomponent analysis from a biological body, and pharmaceutical agent delivery to the said body, comprising of a single autonomously powered integrated microchip platform, the system including: (a) at least one microneedle, (b) at least one microactuator, (c) at least one miniature compartment, (d) at least one microsensor, and (e) a microelectronic system, for the purpose of fluid sampling, multicomponent analysis, pharmaceutical agent delivery, diagnostic aid, and disease control.
6. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the microneedle is at least individually addressable, controlled, and actuated by the microactuator along the longitudinal direction of the microneedle.
11. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the actuator has at least the shape of a cantilever beam (microbeam), being clamped (fixed) on one end and free to deflect on the distal end.
12. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the actuator has at least the shape of a microbeam that is attached at both distal ends and thus forming a clamped beam (microbridge).
13. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein no physical displacement of the actuator occurs as long as it is not being electrically, thermally, magnetically stimulated and or actuated.
14. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the microneedle is attached to the cantilever beam at the location where the maximal displacement of the actuator occurs.
15. The microsystem of claim 2 2 wherein the base of the microneedle is integrated with the actuator.
16. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the maximal displacement of the actuator is time controlled (actuation time).
18. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the compartment is conformed by the microactuator (at the bottom), by the microsensor (at the top) and the compartment walls.
19. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the compartment is in fluid communication with the hole at the base of the microneedle and other fluidic channels and secondary sample compartments.
20. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the compartment is a chamber with a limited volume.
21. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the compartment is manufactured out of a biocompatible material such as silicon, glass and plastic.
22. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the internal wall of the compartment is coated with at least one biocompatible material to minimize coagulation of fluid comprised primarily of blood.
23. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the compartment contains a sensor operable to determine when the fluid completely fills the miniature compartment such that the increase of the accumulating fluid may be terminated.
24. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the ceiling of the compartment holds a protrusion acting as a primary microvalve.
25. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the primary microvalve is a valve which inhibits a liquid transfer through the microneedle during the idle state of the microactuator.
26. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the primary microvalve is a valve which separates the fluid compartment into two separate fluid compartments and allows differential measurements of the fluid samples in each compartment.
27. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein the protrusion contains at least one microchannel acting as a secondary microvalve.
40. The microsystem of claim 2 wherein at least one microchannel is implemented horizontally between the bottom of the microelectronics and the outside wall of the ceiling of the miniature compartment claimed in claim 34.
71. The microsystem of claim 2 mounted on a disposable patch attached to the said body with an adhesive antiseptic layer.
Publication number: 20050228313
Applicant: University Technologies International Inc. (Calgary)
Inventors: Karan Kaler (Bragg Creek), Giorgio Gattiker (Calgary), Martin Mintchev (Calgary)
Application Number: 11/003,027
Current U.S. Class: 600/583.000; 600/573.000; 604/27.000