Published January 31, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Nitrogen Dioxide Detection with Ambipolar Silicon Nanowire Transistor Sensors

  • 1. ROR icon University College Cork
  • 2. ROR icon Advanced Materials and BioEngineering Research
  • 3. EDMO icon Environmental Research Institute, UCC
  • 4. ROR icon Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf
  • 5. ROR icon TU Dresden
  • 6. ROR icon National Technical University of Athens
  • 7. ROR icon Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Description

Abstract:

Si nanowire transistors are ideal for the sensitive detection of atmospheric species due to their enhanced sensitivity to changes in the electrostatic potential at the channel surface. In this study, we present unique ambipolar Si junctionless nanowire transistors (Si-JNTs) that incorporate both n- and p-type conduction within a single device. These transistors enable scalable detection of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a critical atmospheric oxidative pollutant, across a broad concentration range, from high levels (25–50 ppm) to low levels (250 ppb–2 ppm). Acting as an electron acceptor, NO2 generates holes and functions as a pseudodopant for Si-JNTs, altering the conductance and other device parameters. Consequently, ambipolar Si-JNTs exhibit a dual response at room temperature, reacting on both p- and n-conduction channels when exposed to gaseous NO2, thereby offering a larger parameter space compared to a unipolar device. Key characteristics of the Si-JNTs, including on-current (Ion), threshold voltage (Vth) and mobility (μ), were observed to dynamically change on both the p- and n-channels when exposed to NO2. The p-conduction channel showed superior performance across all parameters when compared to the device’s n-channel. For example, within the NO2 concentration range of 250 ppb to 2 ppm, the p-channel achieved a responsivity of 37%, significantly surpassing the n-channel’s 12.5%. Additionally, the simultaneous evolution of multiple parameters in this dual response space enhances the selectivity of Si-JNTs toward NO2 and improves their ability to distinguish between different pollutant gases, such as NO2, ammonia, sulfur dioxide and methane.

Notes (English)

This publication was published in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces on 30th Jan 2025.

RADICAL represents a 'Fundamental Breakthrough in Detection of Atmospheric Free Radicals'.

Find out more on the RADICAL project website: radical-air.eu

The RADICAL project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 899282.

Files

vardhan-et-al-2025-nitrogen-dioxide-detection-with-ambipolar-silicon-nanowire-transistor-sensors.pdf

Additional details

Funding

European Commission
RADICAL – Fundamental Breakthrough in Detection of Atmospheric Free Radicals 899282

Dates

Available
2025-01-31