In this paper, we propose a new gas nanosensor based on a Dual-Gate Schottky Barrier carbon nanotube field-effect transistor (DG SB-CNTFET) endowed with an all-terminal gas-sensitive configuration, investigated through full quantum-mechanical simulations. The numerical modeling is performed using the Non-Equilibrium Green's Function (NEGF) formalism combined with a pz-orbital nearest-neighbor tight-binding approach to describe quantum transport in Schottky barrier CNTFETs. Full threedimensional electrostatics is incorporated by self-consistently solving the Poisson equation. The sensing principle relies on gas-induced variations in the metal work function at all terminals. The three-dimensional (3D) quantum simulation study covers transfer characteristics, potential profiles, charge density distributions, transmission coefficients, and sensitivity in both current-mode and pseudothreshold voltage-shift mode. Four device configurations are investigated: (i) only the source terminal is sensitive, (ii) both source and drain are sensitive, (iii) source, drain, and top-gate are sensitive, and (iv) all terminals, including the back-control gate, are sensitive. The potential for sensitivity enhancement through coupling capacitance engineering is also examined. Results show that the all-terminal gas-sensitive configuration yields a substantial improvement in the constant-current gate voltage shift, enabling the detection of extremely low gas pressures. These findings establish the proposed DG SB-CNTFETbased nanosensor as a strong candidate for next-generation ultra-sensitive gas detection systems, where compact size, low power consumption, and exceptional sensitivity are critical requirements.
An ultrasensitive gas nanosensor based on a dual-gate Schottky barrier CNT-FET with an all-terminal gas-sensitive design: a three-dimensional quantum simulation study
Di Bartolomeo, AntonioWriting – Review & Editing
2025
Abstract
In this paper, we propose a new gas nanosensor based on a Dual-Gate Schottky Barrier carbon nanotube field-effect transistor (DG SB-CNTFET) endowed with an all-terminal gas-sensitive configuration, investigated through full quantum-mechanical simulations. The numerical modeling is performed using the Non-Equilibrium Green's Function (NEGF) formalism combined with a pz-orbital nearest-neighbor tight-binding approach to describe quantum transport in Schottky barrier CNTFETs. Full threedimensional electrostatics is incorporated by self-consistently solving the Poisson equation. The sensing principle relies on gas-induced variations in the metal work function at all terminals. The three-dimensional (3D) quantum simulation study covers transfer characteristics, potential profiles, charge density distributions, transmission coefficients, and sensitivity in both current-mode and pseudothreshold voltage-shift mode. Four device configurations are investigated: (i) only the source terminal is sensitive, (ii) both source and drain are sensitive, (iii) source, drain, and top-gate are sensitive, and (iv) all terminals, including the back-control gate, are sensitive. The potential for sensitivity enhancement through coupling capacitance engineering is also examined. Results show that the all-terminal gas-sensitive configuration yields a substantial improvement in the constant-current gate voltage shift, enabling the detection of extremely low gas pressures. These findings establish the proposed DG SB-CNTFETbased nanosensor as a strong candidate for next-generation ultra-sensitive gas detection systems, where compact size, low power consumption, and exceptional sensitivity are critical requirements.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


