Microfluidics plays a key role in the design of automated platforms for realizing biological assays in a miniaturized format. Several advantages are offered by a microfluidic system, namely, low sample and reagent consumption (typically a few microliters), the possibility to mass-produce and to integrate several analysis modules enabling portable automated applications, fast analysis and low cost. Furthermore, the combination of advanced Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) technology and microfluidics can result in flexible and easy-to-use hybrid systems that hold large potential for application in an analytical laboratory or at the point-of-care. In this Thesis, two different monolithic silicon CMOS chips were designed, fabricated and tested, demonstrating state-of-the-art performance utilising a novel fluorescence detection principle. They allowed the detection of monoclonal antibodies in a solution or the precise counting of specifically labelled fluorescent cells in a mixed-cell sample. The proposed detection method does not require the utilization of a fluorescence camera and filter set. The first part of this Thesis presents different methods, fabrication processes and materials for microfluidic cartridges that can be integrated in a hybrid way with silicon CMOS chips. Glass and SU-8 capillaries are tested, a novel material (NOA 63) is proposed for fabricating a natively hydrophilic microfluidic cartridge, and the fabrication of custom-designed polydimethyl(-siloxane) (PDMS) cartridges for easy integration on top of a CMOS chip is introduced. The second part of this Thesis presents the combination of microfluidics with a monolithic and fully-integrated CMOS chip for the manipulation and detection of fluorescent magnetic beads, inside a PDMS microchannel that is loosely positioned on top of the chip. Magnetic manipulation is done by current actuation of microcoils on the chip; detection is achieved using single photon avalanche diodes (SPADs), located in the centre of each microcoil, that count the fluorescent photons originating from a single labeled magnetic bead. This approach permits in principle microscope-less fluorescence detection with high sensitivity. Using sandwich immunoassays on the beads' surfaces, the selective detection of the cancer biomarker 5D10 monoclonal antibody (mAb) from a non-purified hybridoma cell-culture medium is demonstrated. In the third part, a CMOS chip comprising a matrix of SPADs is designed, fabricated and tested. The recognition of single fluorescently-labelled cells from the breast cancer cell line MCF-7 in a test solution of mixed MCF-7 and non-fluorescent Jurkat cells is demonstrated, without the need of a bulky and expensive fluorescent microscope setup. Moreover, due to the use of a SPAD matrix spanning the complete width of the microchannel, the system does not require any cell focusing mechanism, needed when using a single detector. This allowed the use of a very simple, easily replicabl
Tobias Kippenberg, Mikhail Churaev, Xinru Ji, Zihan Li, Alisa Davydova, Junyin Zhang, Yang Chen, Xi Wang, Kai Huang, Chen Yang
Edoardo Charbon, Claudio Bruschini, Arin Can Ülkü, Yichen Feng