Ultrasensitive Magnetic Sensors Enabled by Heterogeneous Integration of Graphene Hall Elements and Silicon Processing Circuits
Tongyu Dai, Chengying Chen, Le Huang, Jianhua Jiang, Lian‐Mao Peng, Zhiyong Zhang
Abstract
Graphene Hall elements (GHEs) have been demonstrated to be promising magnetic field sensors with excellent sensitivity, linearity, temperature stability, and compatibility with complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-integrated circuits (ICs). However, the demonstrated GHEs have still not exhibited a comprehensive advantage in performance over commercial integrated Hall sensors which were implemented in integrated Hall element and CMOS processing ICs. In this work, we develop a technology for the three-dimensional (3D) heterogeneous integration of silicon-based CMOS ICs and GHEs, and the fabricated magnetic field sensors outperform commercial high-end integrated Hall sensors. Specifically, the integrated Hall sensors are implemented in a stacked integration on Si based on a chopper programmable-gain amplifier (CPGA), a chopper-stabilized second-order sigma-delta modulator (CSDM), and graphene-based Hall elements on monochips. GHEs with high sensitivity (up to 1000 A/VT) are fabricated with a compatible process on a smoothened silicon nitride passivation layer of silicon-based CMOS ICs, and the two device layers are connected by an interlayer. The heterogeneous integrated Hall ICs exhibit current and voltage magnetic sensitivities up to 64 000 A/VT and 6.12 V/VT, respectively, which are much higher than those in all other reported nanomaterial-based Hall sensors and even in high-end commercial Hall ICs. Furthermore, the 3D heterogeneous integration technology used here can be extended as a universal technology for integrating nanomaterial-based sensors and Si CMOS ICs.