Definition:
A biochip is a collection of
miniaturized test sites (micro arrays) arranged on a solid substrate that
permits many tests to be performed at the same time in order to get higher
throughput and speed. Typically, a biochip's surface area is not longer than a
fingernail. Like a computer chip that can perform millions of mathematical
operation in one second, a biochip can perform thousands of biological operations, such as decoding genes, in a
few seconds.
A genetic
biochip is designed to "freeze" into place the structures of many
short strands of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), the basic chemical instruction
that determines the characteristics of an organism.
Effectively, it is used as
a kind of "test tube" for real chemical samples.
The biochip implants system
consists of two components: a
transponder and a reader or scanner. The
transponder is the actual biochip implant. The biochip system is radio
frequency identification ( RFID)system,
using low-frequency radio signals to communicate between the biochip and
reader. The reading range or activation range, between reader and biochip is
small, normally between 2 and 12 inches.
The Transponder:
The transponder is the actual
biochip implant. It is a passive transponder, meaning it
contains no battery or energy of its own. In comparison, an active transponder
would provide its own energy source, normally a small battery. Because the
passive contains no battery, or nothing to wear out, it has a very long life up
to 99 years, and no maintenance.
Being passive, it is inactive until the reader
activates it by sending it a low-power electrical charge. The reader reads or
scans the implanted biochip and receives back data (in this case an
identification number) from the biochips. The communication between biochip and
reader is via low-frequency
radio waves. Since
the communication is via very low frequency radio waves it is nit at all
harmful to the human body.
The biochip-transponder
consists of four parts; computer
microchip, antenna coil,
capacitor and the glass capsule.
Computer microchips:
The microchip stores a unique
identification number from 10 to 15 digits long. The storage capacity of the
current microchips is limited, capable of storing only a single ID number. AVID
(American Veterinary Identification Devices), claims their chips, using a
nnn-nnn-nnn format, has the capability of over 70 trillion unique numbers.
The
unique ID number is "etched" or encoded via a laser onto the surface
of the microchip before assembly. Once the number is encoded it is impossible
to alter. The microchip also contains the electronic circuitry necessary to
transmit the ID number to the "reader".
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