Triple-Junction Optoelectronic Sensor with Nanophotonic Layer Integration for Single-Molecule Level Decoding

ACS Nano. 2019 Apr 23;13(4):4486-4495. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.9b00019. Epub 2019 Mar 21.

Abstract

Interest in developing a rapid and robust DNA sequencing platform has surged over the past decade. Various next-/third-generation sequencing mechanisms have been employed to replace the traditional Sanger sequencing method. In sequencing by synthesis, a signal is monitored by a scanning charge-coupled device (CCD) to identify thousands to millions of incorporated dNTPs with distinctive fluorophores on a chip. Because one reaction site usually occupies dozens of pixels on a CCD detector, a bottleneck related to the bandwidth of CCD imaging limits the throughputs of the sequencing performance and causes trade-offs among speed, accuracy, read length, and the numbers of reaction sites in parallel. Thus, current research aims to align one reaction site to a few pixels by directly stacking nanophotonic layers onto a CMOS detector to minimize the size of the sequencing platforms and accelerate the processing procedures. This article reports a custom integrated optoelectronic device based on a triple-junction photodiode (TPD) CMOS sensor in conjunction with NPL integration for real-time illumination and detection of fluorescent molecules.

Keywords: CMOS; filter; grating; nanophotonic layer; planar waveguide; triple-junction photodiode (TPD).

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't