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Medical Engineering Seminar. Assistant Professor Constantine Sideris

Thursday, May 30, 2024
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Moore B280
Harnessing Electromagnetic Fields for Biomedical Devices: From Point-of-Care Biosensing and Ingestible "Smart" Pills to Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Spectrometry and Neural Stimulators
Constantine Sideris, Andrew and Erna Viterbi Early Career Chair and Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Southern California,

Biomedical device technology has been rapidly advancing over the past decade and is poised to revolutionize healthcare as we see it today. CMOS integrated circuits have been a major enabling factor towards the success of modern biomedical devices due to supporting high levels of integration, capability for high sensitivity detection, and being mass producible at a low price point. In this talk, I will show how manipulation and sensing of electric and magnetic fields using CMOS technology can be used to enable Point-of-Care biomolecular sensors, position tracking of implantable and ingestible devices, miniaturized Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectrometers, and versatile neural stimulators. I will begin by presenting a Point-of-Care magnetic biosensor array designed in 65nm CMOS and capable of performing wash-free immunodetection, as well as single-site multiplexed detection of biomolecular targets. The sensor consists of a 2x2 magnetic spectrometer array which leverages a concurrent dual-frequency transformer-based oscillator. Next, I will discuss a new magnetic localization scheme developed in my group based on frequency-division multiplexing for capsule endoscopy applications. The approach significantly reduces the reference excitation coil sizes and decreases the required excitation current by three orders of magnitude compared to prior work, making it practical for wearable systems. The new scheme achieves very high experimentally demonstrated tracking accuracy in both 2D and 3D localization experiments, achieving a sub-mm mean absolute position error and consuming only 336μW while running at 100% duty cycle and packaged in an ingestible pill form factor. Next, I will shift gears and present our recent work on realizing the first fully integrated pulse-mode EPR spectrometer on a chip. The chip leverages a subharmonic direct-conversion-based receiver architecture and has two on-chip sensing cells, supporting both continuous-wave (CW) and pulse-mode detection at 14GHz. I will present pulse and CW-mode EPR measurements, as well as the very first two-pulse experiment done on a chip. Finally, I will conclude the talk by touching on our most recent work on a dynamically programmable, high-voltage tolerant multi-channel neural stimulator with on-chip charge balancing for optic nerve and deep brain stimulation.

Biography: Constantine Sideris is an Assistant Professor and the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Early Career Chair at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Southern California. He received the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees with honors from the California Institute of Technology in 2010, 2011, and 2017 respectively. He was a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley's Wireless Research Center (2013-2014) and a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Computing and Mathematical Sciences at Caltech (2017-2018), working on integral equation methods for electromagnetics. Constantine's research interests include analog/RF integrated circuits, photonic integrated circuits, and computational electromagnetics for biomedical and biosensing applications and wireless communications. He is the recipient of an ONR YIP award (2023), an NSF CAREER award (2021), an AFOSR YIP award (2020), an AFOSR DURIP award (2021), the Caltech Leadership Award (2017), and an NSF graduate research fellowship (2010). Constantine's research is highly interdisciplinary and bridges the fields of bioengineering, medicine, applied mathematics and computation with electrical engineering and physics. His current interests in biomedical devices include portable Point-of-Care in-vitro biosensors, wearable devices for real-time monitoring and analysis of biological signals, ingestible "smart" pills, and implantable devices. His current interests in computational electromagnetics include developing fast algorithms for simulating RF and nanophotonic devices and coupling them with efficient optimization algorithms to achieve the automated design of new, high-performance electromagnetic devices. https://viterbi.usc.edu/directory/faculty/Sideris/Constantine

Introduction by Ali Hajimiri. Hosted by YC Tai.

For more information, please contact Christine Garske by email at [email protected] or visit https://mede.caltech.edu/events/seminars.