Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/1574
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dc.contributor.authorRoy, Pranab
dc.contributor.authorBhattacharjee, Rupam
dc.contributor.authorSohid, Moudud
dc.contributor.authorChakraborty, Sudipta
dc.contributor.authorRahaman, Hafizur
dc.contributor.authorDasgupta, Partha Sarathi
dc.date.accessioned2021-08-26T06:23:38Z-
dc.date.available2021-08-26T06:23:38Z-
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84869054125&doi=10.1145%2f2380445.2380511&partnerID=40&md5=a6a65a7d6454884fe3e5649f88174a18
dc.identifier.urihttps://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/1574-
dc.descriptionRoy, Pranab, School of VLSI Technology, Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur, India; Bhattacharjee, Rupam, School of VLSI Technology, Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur, India; Sohid, Moudud, School of VLSI Technology, Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur, India; Chakraborty, Sudipta, School of VLSI Technology, Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur, India; Rahaman, Hafizur, School of VLSI Technology, Bengal Engineering and Science University, Shibpur, India; Dasgupta, Partha Sarathi, Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta, India
dc.descriptionISSN/ISBN - 978-145031426-8
dc.descriptionpp.423-432
dc.descriptionDOI - 10.1145/2380445.2380511
dc.description.abstractThe recent advances in microfluidic technology have resulted in the emergence of commercially successful lab-on-chip systems that manifested as applicable devices in the wide range of areas e.g. high-throughput DNA sequencing, immunoassays and clinical chemistry, environmental toxicity monitoring and point of-care diagnosis of diseases. The current generation of microfluidic devices termed as digital microfluidic biochips (DMFB) are capable of manipulating individual droplets of chemicals on a 2D planar array of electrodes. A special class of DMFB classified as Cross-referencing biochip has currently drawn major attention for targeted integration of multiple bioassay protocols. However, for parallel execution of multiple bioassays within a single array - these chips face a serious issue of electrode interference during simultaneous routing of droplets. In this paper, we propose a routing-aware zone-based detailed placement and compaction technique that reorients the droplet locations on a pre-synthesized Bioassay schematic fulfilling the requisite dependency constraints necessary for efficient execution# of the specified bioassay protocols. The focus for the proposed scheme include (i)enhanced routing in respect of less overall and average routing time, optimum cell utilization (ii)minimum or no crossover with intelligent collision avoidance, and (iii) optimized pin utilization with intelligent pin clustering and hence overcoming the major issue of electrode interference for Cross referencing biochips. Simulations are carried out on three test benches of Benchmark suite III, and the results obtained are encouraging. Copyright 2012 ACM.
dc.publisherSCOPUS
dc.publisherCODES+ISSS'12 - Proceedings of the 10th ACM International Conference on Hardware/Software-Codesign and System Synthesis, Co-located with ESWEEK
dc.subjectAlgorithms
dc.subjectBiochips
dc.subjectCross referencing
dc.subjectDigital microfluidics
dc.subjectEWOD
dc.subjectPin constraint
dc.subjectPlacement
dc.subjectRouting
dc.subjectSample droplets
dc.titleAn intelligent compaction technique for pin constrained routing in Cross referencing digital microfluidic biochips
dc.typeConference Paper
Appears in Collections:Management Information Systems

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