On-chip trace detection of Cd
Yu Y, Cai W, Fu W, Deng T, Ma C
Heavy Metal Detection
Cadmium from fertilizers and industrial runoff quietly accumulates in garden soil and gets taken up by root vegetables like carrots and leafy greens you eat — a sensor this sensitive could give farmers and regulators an early warning before contamination reaches your plate.
Scientists created a tiny, highly sensitive chip designed to detect vanishingly small amounts of cadmium, a toxic metal that pollutes soil and gets absorbed by food crops. Older detection tools struggled with electrical noise and were hard to scale up for real-world field use. This new chip solves those problems by integrating the detector and electronics together on a single chip, making it far more precise and practical.
Key Findings
The system achieves an ultra-low noise level of 273.9 fA (femtoamperes), enabling trace-level cadmium detection
A multi-channel design allows simultaneous detection across multiple samples, improving throughput and scalability
Vertically integrated on-chip electrodes reduce parasitic capacitance that degraded performance in conventional workstations
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers built a custom microchip that detects cadmium — a toxic heavy metal — at trace concentrations with exceptional sensitivity (273.9 fA noise floor), overcoming the noise and scalability problems that limit conventional electrochemical detection systems.
Abstract Preview
Electrochemical techniques are commonly employed for heavy metal detection. However, due to parasitic capacitance and noise issues arising from their structural design, conventional workstations fa...
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