1. Metal Strip Implanted Tunneling Field-Effect Transistor Biosensor as a Label-Free Biosensor.
- Author
-
Hussian A, Alkhammash HI, Wani MS, and Loan SA
- Subjects
- Metals chemistry, Materials Testing, Particle Size, Biocompatible Materials chemistry, Biosensing Techniques instrumentation, Transistors, Electronic
- Abstract
In this study, we design and simulate a metal implanted dielectrically modulated tunneling field-effect transistor (MI-DMTFET). In the ambipolar conduction state, the proposed structure works as an efficient sensor for the detection of a wide range of biomolecules. A metal strip (MS) is implanted above the drain-channel junction in the gate dielectric to improve the alignment of band gaps. Therefore, with the help of implanted metal work function engineering, the tunneling barrier gets lowered, which in turn increases the ambipolar current. An optimum metal-strip implant work function of 4.85 eV and a length of 1.5 nm have resulted in significantly improved performance of the proposed device. It has been observed that when the biomolecules with varying dielectric constants and charge densities are captured in the nanogap cavity, the ambipolar current of the biosensor changes, resulting in the detection of the biomolecules. Quantitative and comprehensive analyses of device parameters such as surface potential, electric field, band-to-band tunneling, subthreshold slope, and I
ON / IOFF ratio analysis have been performed. Rigorous comparative analyses of key performance-measuring parameters have been performed with a conventional sensor device. It has been found that the proposed device offers maximum sensitivity of 1220 under an ambipolar state at k = 12.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF