Abstract

Semiconducting carbon nanotube (CNT) film is a promising material for constructing high-performance complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs) and highly sensitive field-effect transistor (FET) bio/chemical sensors. Moreover, CNT logic transistors and sensors can be integrated through a compatible low-temperature fabrication process, providing enough thermal budget to construct monolithic three-dimensional (M3D) systems for smart sensors. However, an M3D sensing chip based on CNT film has not yet been demonstrated. In this work, we develop M3D technology to fabricate CNT CMOS ICs and CNT sensor arrays in two different layers; then, we demonstrate a preliminary M3D sensing system comprising CNT CMOS interfacing ICs in the bottom layer and CNT sensors in the upper layer through interlayer vias as links. As a typical example, a highly sensitive hydrogen sensing IC has been demonstrated to perform in situ sensing and processing functions through upper-layer FET-based hydrogen sensors exposed to the environment and bottom-layer CNT CMOS voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) interfacing circuits. The M3D CNT sensing ICs convert hydrogen concentration information (8-128 ppm) to digital frequency information (0.78-1.11 GHz) with a sensitivity of 2.75 MHz/ppm. M3D sensing technology is expected to provide a universal sensing system for future smart sensing chips, including multitarget detection and ultralow power sensors.

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