Room temperature multiplexed gas sensing using chemical-sensitive 3.5-nm-thin silicon transistors
Author(s) -
Hossain M. Fahad,
Hiroshi Shiraki,
Matin Amani,
Chuchu Zhang,
Vivek Srinivas Hebbar,
Wei Gao,
Hiroki Ota,
Mark Hettick,
Daisuke Kiriya,
Yuze Chen,
YuLun Chueh,
Ali Javey
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1602557
Subject(s) - silicon , materials science , transistor , nanoscopic scale , optoelectronics , nanotechnology , chip , multiplexing , computer science , electrical engineering , telecommunications , voltage , engineering
There is great interest in developing a low-power gas sensing technology that can sensitively and selectively quantify the chemical composition of a target atmosphere. Nanomaterials have emerged as extremely promising candidates for this technology due to their inherent low-dimensional nature and high surface-to-volume ratio. Among these, nanoscale silicon is of great interest because pristine silicon is largely inert on its own in the context of gas sensing, unless functionalized with an appropriate gas-sensitive material. We report a chemical-sensitive field-effect transistor (CS-FET) platform based on 3.5-nm-thin silicon channel transistors. Using industry-compatible processing techniques, the conventional electrically active gate stack is replaced by an ultrathin chemical-sensitive layer that is electrically nonconducting and coupled to the 3.5-nm-thin silicon channel. We demonstrate a low-power, sensitive, and selective multiplexed gas sensing technology using this platform by detecting H2S, H2, and NO2 at room temperature for environment, health, and safety in the oil and gas industry, offering significant advantages over existing technology. Moreover, the system described here can be readily integrated with mobile electronics for distributed sensor networks in environmental pollution mapping and personal air-quality monitors.
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