| Literature DB >> 25817336 |
Sara Rigante1, Paolo Scarbolo2, Mathias Wipf3, Ralph L Stoop3, Kristine Bedner4, Elizabeth Buitrago1, Antonios Bazigos1, Didier Bouvet1, Michel Calame3, Christian Schönenberger3, Adrian M Ionescu1.
Abstract
Field-effect transistors (FETs) form an established technology for sensing applications. However, recent advancements and use of high-performance multigate metal-oxide semiconductor FETs (double-gate, FinFET, trigate, gate-all-around) in computing technology, instead of bulk MOSFETs, raise new opportunities and questions about the most suitable device architectures for sensing integrated circuits. In this work, we propose pH and ion sensors exploiting FinFETs fabricated on bulk silicon by a fully CMOS compatible approach, as an alternative to the widely investigated silicon nanowires on silicon-on-insulator substrates. We also provide an analytical insight of the concept of sensitivity for the electronic integration of sensors. N-channel fully depleted FinFETs with critical dimensions on the order of 20 nm and HfO2 as a high-k gate insulator have been developed and characterized, showing excellent electrical properties, subthreshold swing, SS ∼ 70 mV/dec, and on-to-off current ratio, Ion/Ioff ∼ 10(6), at room temperature. The same FinFET architecture is validated as a highly sensitive, stable, and reproducible pH sensor. An intrinsic sensitivity close to the Nernst limit, S = 57 mV/pH, is achieved. The pH response in terms of output current reaches Sout = 60%. Long-term measurements have been performed over 4.5 days with a resulting drift in time δVth/δt = 0.10 mV/h. Finally, we show the capability to reproduce experimental data with an extended three-dimensional commercial finite element analysis simulator, in both dry and wet environments, which is useful for future advanced sensor design and optimization.Entities:
Keywords: Fin field-effect transistor sensor; FinFET; ISFET; high-k dielectric; long-term stability; low power; pH sensing; sensing integrated circuits
Year: 2015 PMID: 25817336 DOI: 10.1021/nn5064216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881