Integrated biochemical sensors based on Mach-Zehnder interferometers (MZIs) rely on the evanescent field detection principle to monitor the phase shift induced by a refractive index change on the surface of the sensing arm, providing a high sensitivity thanks to the long interaction length with the analyte. This paper presents an integrated refractive index and biochemical sensor based on a pair of balanced MZIs realized on silicon-on-insulator. The device includes a thermal phase modulator in one of the branches of each MZI to extract univocally the induced phase change by applying active phase detection based on the phase generated carrier technique. The direct modulation of the MZI results in a simple configuration of the sensor, only requiring a fixed wavelength laser and a photodetector, enabling the possibility of full monolithic integration. The results of refractive index measurements show a detection limit down to 4.88 × 10-7 RIU. Additionally, an immunoassay reports the binding of anti-bovine serum albumin (BSA) to BSA, with anti-BSA concentrations down to 33.33 nM. Index Terms-Optical sensors, chemical and biological sensors, photonic integrated circuits, interferometry, phase modulation. I. INTRODUCTION I N THE past decades, there has been a growing interest in integrated photonic biochemical sensors for a wide range of applications, such as clinical diagnosis, food safety and chemical and biological warfare surveillance [1]. In particular, silicon