Chemically sensitive element

4512870
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Inventors

Kohara, Satsuki
Ono, Noriaki

Application #

557610

Filed

Dec-2-1983

Published

Apr-23-1985

Current US Class

204/416
204/418
204/419
257/253
257/414

International Classes

G01N 027/30

Field of Search

204/416 204/418 204/419 204/420 357/25 324/71.5 128/635

Assignee

Olympus Optical Co., Ltd. (JP)

Examiners

Kaplan; G. L.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Ostrolenk, Faber, Gerb & Soffen

US Patent References

4020830   Selective chemical...
4273636   Selective chemical...
4411741   Apparatus and met...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

12th Conference of the Medical Engineering Society of Japan, Copendium of Scheduled Addresses, May 1973. Documentary Materials for Research Meeting on Electrical Measurement--Documents No. EM-74-22 through 31, "New Fields of Instrumentation v. Bio-Electrical Instrumentation, Jan. 28, 29, 1974, Japan. Moody et al, "Selective Ion Sensitive Electrodes", Merrow Technical Library, 1971. Fiedler et al, "Selectrode--The Universal Ion-Selective Electrode", Part VII. A Valinomycin-Based Potassium Electrode with Nonporous Polymer Membrane and Solid-State Inner Reference System, Analytica Chimica Acta. 67, (1973), 179-193. Gough et al, "Enzyme Electrodes", Science, vol. 180, pp. 380-384. Bergveld, "Development, Operation and Application of the Ion-Sensitive Field-Effect Transistor as a Tool for Electrophysiology", IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, vol. BME-19, No. 5, Sep. 1972.

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A chemical sensing element suitable for measurement of the activity or the concentration of a specific ion contained in an electrolyte is provided with an optically opaque membrane between a gate insulating membrane and an ion sensing membrane of a field-effect type transistor. Since the opaque membrane is provided, extraneous light impinging on a gate is blocked by the opaque membrane, whereby an erroneous potential due to extraneous light is prevented. Accordingly, the accurate measurement of the activity or the concentration of a specific ion contained in an electrolyte may be achieved even in intense ambient light.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A chemically sensitive element of the ion sensing field-effect transistor type including a semiconductor substrate having source, drain and channel regions; a gate insulating membrane disposed atop said channel region; an optically opaque membrane disposed atop said gate insulating membrane; a protecting membrane disposed atop said optically opaque membrane; and an ion sensing membrane disposed atop said protecting membrane.

2. The chemically sensitive element of claim 1 wherein said optically opaque membrane consists of a metallic film.

3. A chemically sensitive element of the ion sensing field-effect transistor type including a semiconductor substrate having an upper surface and source, drain and channel regions defined at said upper surface; a gate insulating membrane disposed atop said channel region; a protective membrane disposed atop said gate insulating membrane; an optically opaque membrane disposed atop said protective membrane and being at least coextensive with said upper surface; and an ion sensing membrane disposed atop said optically opaque membrane.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a chemically sensitive element, and more particularly, to such an element which may be used to determine the activity or the concentration of a specified ion contained in an electrolyte.

There has been proposed a chemically sensitive element for determining the activity or the concentration of a specific ion contained in an electrolyte, which element has the construction of the field-effect transistor type as shown in FIG. 1, which is also known as an ion sensor. The ion sensor 11 of the field-effect transistor (hereinafter abbreviated as ISFET), which is oblong as viewed in a plane, comprises a gate 12, which has an ion sensing portion at the right end of FIG. 1, a lead portion 13 for a source and a lead portion 14 for a drain at the middle of the left side of FIG. 1.

In a section view of the gate 12, taken on section line II--II in FIG. 2, its configuration is long sideways hexagonal in shape and there are provided an n-type drain diffusion region 26 at the middle and upper surface side of a p-type silicon substrate 22 and an n-type source diffusion region 27 at both ends thereof. The entirety of the gate is covered by a gate insulating membrane 23 and is further covered by a protecting membrane 24 such that when immersed in a solution to be examined the gate insulating membrane 23 will not swell due to the solution. In addition, an ion sensing membrane 25 is provided on the upper surface of the protecting membrane 23 by the drain and the source diffusion region 26 and 27 sides.
 
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