This patent specification pertains to detection of teraherz (THz) radiation and more specifically to detecting THz energy using an operating regime of semiconductor devices such as CMOS transistors that conventionally is called the OFF (non-conducting) state, and to utilizing such detection in imaging, communications, and other fields.
Several references, cited at the end of this patent specification, are identified by numbers in square brackets in the description below and are hereby incorporated by reference.
THz radiation typically denotes electromagnetic energy in an ITU-designated band of frequencies from 0.3 to 3 terahertz (1 THz=1012 Hz) and wavelengths ranging from 1 mm to 0.1 mm (100 μm). This is a range between microwaves and infrared light, and shares some properties with each. Like infrared and microwave radiation, THz radiation is understood to travel in a line-of-sight and to be non-ionizing, which makes it safer for biological tissue. Like microwave radiation, THz radiation can pass through some non-conducting materials such as clothing, paper, cardboard, wood, masonry, plastic, and ceramics. THz radiation can be modulated by differences in water content and density of tissue and therefore can be used for imaging. Some materials of interest in various fields, including security, have spectral “fingerprints” in the THz range, which opens prospects for combining spectral identification with imaging. The short wavelength of THz radiation can contribute to high spatial resolution in imaging and to high bandwidth in communications.
Despite such potential advantages of THz radiation, progress in utilizing it has been hindered by difficulties in detecting such radiation. Known THz detectors include pyroelectric sensors, Schottky barrier diodes, and GaAs field-effect transistors. The known detectors have limitations such as low sensitivity, slow speed, requirements for cryogenic cooling, and difficulty scaling to array formats suitable for THz imaging. Proposals have been made for using CMOS transistors but in modes that suffer from low efficiency particularly at higher frequencies. Infrared focal plane arrays (FPAs) have been proposed for THz imaging experiments but the detection efficiency is believed low, typically less than 5%. Researchers have explored metamaterlal (MM) devices, which are sub-wavelength elements in which their structure rather than their composition dominates their electromagnetic properties. MMs have been proposed for creating resonant absorber structures. Plasmonic devices have been proposed for use in surface plasmon resonance (SPR), where incident light resonantly couples with surface plasmons at a metal/dielectric interface.
The challenge of discovering efficient and effective THz detectors has remained for a long time. This patent specification is directed to meeting that challenge and providing advantageous systems utilizing novel THz detectors.
The examples of new THz detectors described in this patent specification unexpectedly demonstrate that in certain structural conditions and under sub-threshold biasing conditions (or weak inversion), semiconductor devices such as MOSFETs can exhibit dramatic increases in responsivity to THz radiation. According to current understanding, it is believed that under sub-threshold biasing conditions and with the correct structure, the plasmonic detection of signals in THz frequency range in a MOSFET becomes negligible compared to the detection from thermionic emission (TE) through a potential barrier between a highly-doped source region and depleted channel, as described below. The detection current due to TE has been found to be a much stronger function of the applied THz signal (exponential dependence) than the detection current due to plasmonic rectification in the channel alone (a square-law dependence), and with properly extended source regions in accordance with some of the embodiments described in more detail below, a MOSFET in a weak inversion can exhibit much improved responsivity to the THz radiation.
The novel structure and operation of THs detectors described in this patent specification find application in diverse fields such as THz imaging of biological and non-biological objects, spectral analysis of materials, and communications.
As illustrated in
As known in transistor technology, a depletion region is formed from a conducting region by removing free charge carriers. For an enhancement-mode, n-channel MOSFET, when the gate-to-source voltage Vgs is less than the transistor's threshold voltage Vth, it can be said that the transistor is in a cutoff, sub-threshold, or weak-inversion mode. A more accurate model can consider the effect of thermal energy on the distribution of electron energies allowing some of the more energetic electrons at the source to enter the channel and flow to the drain. While the current between drain and source would ideally be zero when the transistor is being used as a turned-off switch, there actually is a weak-Inversion current, sometimes called sub-threshold leakage, which is known to vary with changes in steady gate voltage. It had been believed that THz frequencies applied to the gate of a typical, standard MOSFET would oscillate at too high a rate to allow charge carrier transport that would predictably change channel current.
This patent specification proposes an explanation or theory of why the new device geometry and operation allow useful detection of THz radiation but it should be understood that it is not a limitation on the structure and operation of the novel devices and circuits described herein and that future developments in science may change the proffered explanation or theory and even prove it incorrect.
According to current understanding, in the example of
The symbol . indicates time average. VT is the thermal voltage equal to kT/q where k is the Boltzmann constant, T is the temperature, and q is the electron charge. Rs is the resistance of the source region, proportional to the source length Ls,
where As is the cross-sectional area of the source/channel boundary. Cov is the gate-to-source overlap capacitance. ID is the detector biasing current and J0(jx) is the zero order Bessel function of the first kind. Is is the thermionic emission current over the source-channel barrier for zero gate voltage as shown in equation (2), where NA is the channel doping density, ni is the intrinsic density, and m*e is the electron effective mass.
It is seen from Eq. (1) that thermal emission detection current Id depends exponentially on the amplitude of the THz signal, which is a much stronger function than the quadratic dependence (or linear with power) seen in a MOSFET under strong inversion used in THz detectors using plasmonic mode of detection. The TE detection method also makes a novel use of the device geometry by extending the source region of the MOSFET. Typical values of Rs and Cov for a detection MOSFET with W=2 μm, L=0.35 μm, and Ls=1 μm in 0.35 μm CMOS technologies are 0.2-1 kΩ and 0.5 fF, respectively. This indicates that the ω0RsCov term in (1) is smaller than one for sub-terahertz frequencies (0.2−1 THz). Increase in Ls means a corresponding increase in Rs and this leads to a larger detection current.
The conversion gain of TE (thermionic emission) THz detection in accordance with embodiments of this patent specification has been found to be greatly superior to plasmonic detection in strong inversion. In practical CMOS implementations, the detection current Id can be measured directly or, which is more practical, it can be converted and read out as voltage Vd=Z(Id−ID), where Z is the detection transimpedance. The current-to-voltage conversion can be implemented through a linear resistor Rd as shown in
On the other hand, as discussed in references [3] and [4], in the case of plasmonic detection in the MOSFET channel under strong inversion (Vgs>Vt, where Vt is the MOSFET's threshold voltage), the detected voltage Vd at the drain output is proportional to the THz signal power as shown in Eq. (6), and the conversion gain for this case is shown in Eq. (7):
Photo-Voltaic Readout Mode for TE detection of THz radiation is discussed next. An important feature of the TE detection according to this patent specification is that it allows practical “photo-voltaic” (PV) operation that can be otherwise similar to the readout methods in standard visible-wavelength image sensors but operates at THz frequencies. In the TE detection mode, the detection current Id is repeatedly integrated onto a drain capacitance CINT (e.g., Cdrain in
In another embodiment, illustrated in
Process variation in manufacturing CMOS devices and temperature variations in their use might interfere with matching between the current IP provided by the constant current source and the detector's biasing current ID (set by VGS). Such mismatch may be even more pronounced between different pixels of a THz detector array comprising plural individual THz detectors such as the detector of
The PV mode of THz detection in the TE mode of a MOSFET provides three important benefits over plasmonic detection in the channel. First, it allows a much higher and better-controlled detection transimpedance Z in typical CMOS technologies (i.e., tint/CINT>>Rd). Second, it permits a straightforward control over the SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) by adjusting the integration time t (i.e., the signal power increases with t2int while the noise power increases linearly with tint). Third, since the biasing current ID of the MOSFET in weak inversion (TE mode of detection) is typically much smaller than the basing current in strong inversion (plasmonic detection), its flicker (1/f) noise is negligible and much smaller than in plasmonic detection mode. The dominant noise in the PV mode of detection can be the shot noise of the biasing current ID, as described below.
Since the average detection current in a TE mode MOSFET detector does not depend on the phase of the applied THz signal, the PV readout mode allows a straightforward implementation of a dual (or symmetric) THz detector as in
Responsivity and Noise-Equivalent-Power of TE mode of THz detection are discussed next. The equivalent input impedance Zin of the MOSFET detector in the TE mode can be calculated from its lumped-element model shown in
For a given THz excitation signal at the gate vtgz (t)=V0 cos(ω0t), the average power PMOSFET absorbed by the MOSFET device is then equal to:
If the antenna impedance is matched to the MOSFET input impedance, the responsivity R can then be calculated as
where . is the average over V0 range, and y is the antenna radiation collection efficiency ranging from 0 to 1 depending on the antenna geometry, wavelength, and loses in the material. If the biasing conditions and process parameters from Table 1 above are assumed, the responsivity of the PV mode MOSFET detector is calculated to be around 50 kV/W.
Noise in TE mode MOSFET for THz detection is discussed next. In the TE (or subthreshold) mode of MOSFET operation, there are several independent noise sources: shot noise from the detection current Id, Johnson (or thermal noise) from the scattering in the source and depleted channel regions, and flicker (or 1/f) noise due to surface traps in the channel region. For small signal levels (V0≈0) the noise is dominated by the shot noise of the biasing current ID. For the PV mode of THz detection, the output RMS noise voltage Vn_RMS due to the biasing current shot noise is calculated as in Eq. (12):
For the parameters in Table 1 above, the output RMS noise voltage is equal to 2.4 mVrms resulting in an input referred noise power of 16 nW (or NEP=(16 nW) √{square root over (tint)}=160 pW/√{square root over (Hz)}). It can be shown that the NEP is inversely proportional to √{square root over (ID)} and it does not depend on the detection transimpedance Z, as shown in Eq. (13):
In addition, the Signal-to-Noise ratio (SNR) can be calculated as in Eq. (14). The SNR is proportional to the integration time tint and biasing current ID (i.e., doubling either one will increase the SNR by 3 dB). Larger source resistance Rs (i.e., Increasing H(ω0RsC1) factor) may provide an additional increase in SNR:
It can be seen from Eqs. (13) and (14) that neither of NEP and SNR depends on the integration capacitance CINT, which provides a degree of freedom in choosing an optimal biasing current ID for a specific imaging application. For example, to achieve a background noise limited detection of a 100 GHz band centered around 220 GHz with an imaging system having telescope solid angle of 0.3 and detector area of 375 μm2 a suitable detector's NEP would be around 3 pW/√{square root over (Hz)}. From the noise requirement, an optimal biasing current can then be calculated (e.g., ID=1 μA from
Certain Development and Experimental Results are discussed next. Different topologies using CMOS technology such as common source amplifier, source-follower amplifier, and differential amplifiers can be simulated using Synopsys TCAD tool suite and Linear Technology Spice simulator. Experiments can test the responsivity of each of the circuit models to THz radiation as well as physical changes in the MOS transistors with and without terahertz excitation. Simulations can be run using 0.35 micron CMOS technology models. Simulation results have been found in agreement with values predicted in references (3-7), where it has been shown that the propagation and rectification of over-damped plasma waves in MOS transistor's channel can be used to detect THz radiation in standard CMOS.
Concurrent with extensive simulations investigating the use of different CMOS circuit topologies for the purpose of detecting THz signal for THz imaging applications, a large number of design variations can be designed for a specialized THz focal plane array (FPA) with an integrated antennae matrix and imaging chain. Prototype chips can be fabricated in 0.35 μm CMOS technology through MOSIS, although this is only an example and other CMOS technologies can be used. Each chip of an example of a prototype contains four imaging arrays with 12×12 pixels totaling more than two hundred variations in terms of MOSFET detector size (W/L) coupled to different antennae (bow-tie, linear spiral, and log-spiral antennae) in order to characterize the responsivity to THz excitation and noise performance.
For the purpose of reducing the measurement noise the prototype chips can be tested in an experimental setup such as illustrated in
While several embodiments are described, it should be understood that the new subject matter described in this patent specification is not limited to any one embodiment or combination of embodiments described herein, but instead encompasses numerous alternatives, modifications, and equivalents. In addition, while numerous specific details are set forth in the description in order to provide a thorough understanding, some embodiments can be practiced without some or all of these details. Moreover, for the purpose of clarity, certain technical material that is known in the related art has not been described in detail in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the new subject matter described herein. It should be clear that individual features of one or several of the specific embodiments described herein can be used in combination with features or other described embodiments. Further, like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements. Thus, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the new methods and systems described in this patent specification. Accordingly, the scope of this patent specification is not limited to the above-described embodiments, but instead is defined by the claims of a patent to issue thereon in light of their full scope of equivalents.
This application claims the priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/147,655, filed Apr. 12, 2015, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Dayalu et al. (Terahertz Detection in Si MOSFET based Thermionic Emission, IEEE International conference on Microwaves, Communications, Antennas and Electronic Systems (COMCAS 2015) Nov. 2-4, 2015, Tel Aviv, Israel. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160305823 A1 | Oct 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62147655 | Apr 2015 | US |