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Understanding and improving carbon nanotube-electrode contact in bottom-contacted nanotube gas sensors

Seoho Jung, Roland Hauert, M. Haluška, Cosmin Roman, Christofer Hierold

2020Sensors and Actuators B Chemical24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Suspended carbon nanotube field-effect transistors fabricated with a dry transfer technique demonstrate strong promise as ultra-low-power, hysteresis-free gas sensors. However, the difficulty of establishing a good electrical contact between a nanotube and the electrode surface often limits the yield of low-resistance devices that can operate as low-power gas sensors. In this work, the contact resistance at the nanotube-metal interface and the distribution thereof are reduced significantly by removing the top layer of electrode surface with Ar-ion etching directly before nanotube placement. Combined with post-transfer annealing, this pre-transfer electrode surface cleaning reduces the median ON-resistance of transistors by an order of magnitude--from 1.56 MOhm to 143 kOhm--and the interquartile range by more than two orders of magnitude--from 9.38 MOhm to 59 kOhm. The ability to consistently improve nanotube-metal contact demonstrated in this work is a significant advance in the fabrication of ultraclean nanotube transistors and carbon nanotube gas sensors.

Topics & Concepts

NanotubeMaterials scienceCarbon nanotubeCarbon nanotube field-effect transistorContact resistanceElectrodeNanotechnologyAnnealing (glass)OptoelectronicsTransistorComposite materialField-effect transistorLayer (electronics)ChemistryVoltageElectrical engineeringPhysical chemistryEngineeringCarbon Nanotubes in CompositesMechanical and Optical ResonatorsGas Sensing Nanomaterials and Sensors
Understanding and improving carbon nanotube-electrode contact in bottom-contacted nanotube gas sensors | Litcius