MAE Seminar: A Powerful, Novel Electrochemical Transistor - The 3-Dimensional Carbon Redox Amplifier

McDonnell Douglas Engineering Auditorium (MDEA)
Marc Madou, Ph.D.

Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
UC Irvine

Abstract: Just like a solid-state transistor amplifies a small electronic current, a redox amplifier amplifies an ionic current for the more sensitive detection of species in a liquid (e.g., glucose, lactate, urea, creatinine, etc.). Our team at Tec de Monterrey is working on a novel redox amplifier that can amplify an ionic current more than a hundred times thus making for sensors for those types of analytes 100 times more sensitive than current sensors on the market. This result is principally achieved by making three-dimensional “transistors” instead of two-dimensional and switching from gold as a building material to carbon. 

Bio: Before joining Tec de Monterrey, Madou was a distinguished professor at UC Irvine in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MEA), and earlier, was vice president of Advanced Technology at Nanogen, San Diego. Madou is also the founder of SRI International’s Microsensor Department, founder and president of Teknekron Sensor Development Corporation (TSDC), Visiting Miller Professor at UC Berkeley and Endowed Chair at the Ohio State University (professor in chemistry and materials science and engineering). He specializes in the application of miniaturization technology to chemical and biological problems (BIO-MEMS). He is the author of several books in this burgeoning field, which he helped pioneer both in academia and in industry. “Fundamentals of Microfabrication,” an introduction to MEMS and NEMS, has become known as the “bible” of micromachining. He founded several micromachining companies and has been on the board of many more. Several of his students became well known in academia and through successful MEMS start-ups.

Madou has an h-index of 94 (September 2024) and he is considered the pioneer of two research fields that are now being pursued worldwide i.e., Carbon Micro- and Nanofabrication (C-MEMS and C-NEMS) and Compact Disc Fluidics (CD-Fluidics) for molecular diagnostics. These two technologies have resulted in several start-up companies worldwide. From those founded by Madou, Enevate, a lithium- ion battery company in Irvine, CA, is the largest and best known (https://www.enevate.com).