Negative Capacitance Ion-Sensitive Field-Effect Transistors with improved current sensitivity
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 15:07 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Inserting a negative capacitance PZT capacitor in series with an ISFET gate reduces subthreshold slope by 44% and raises pH current sensitivity by 78%.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Placing a negative capacitance PZT capacitor in series with the gate contact of an ISFET produces a measured 44 percent reduction in subthreshold slope, more than twofold higher current efficiency, and 78 percent higher drain-current response per pH unit compared with a conventional ISFET.
What carries the argument
Negative capacitance from a PZT ferroelectric capacitor inserted in series with the ISFET gate, which amplifies the effective gate voltage and steepens the subthreshold transfer curve beyond the thermionic limit.
If this is right
- The steeper subthreshold slope directly increases drain-current change per unit pH.
- Current efficiency, expressed as transconductance over drain current, rises by more than a factor of two.
- The same gate-series negative-capacitance technique can be applied while retaining standard ISFET fabrication steps.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same series-capacitor approach could be tested on FET sensors for other ions or biomolecules to check for comparable sensitivity gains.
- Integration into sensor arrays would require checking whether the added capacitor affects matching or noise performance across devices.
- Lower required amplification stages could follow if the higher raw current sensitivity reduces downstream circuit demands.
Load-bearing premise
The negative capacitance supplied by the PZT capacitor remains stable during operation without introducing unacceptable hysteresis, leakage, or reliability loss.
What would settle it
Repeated voltage cycling of the PZT capacitor while re-measuring subthreshold slope and pH sensitivity to determine whether the reported 44 percent improvement persists or hysteresis appears.
read the original abstract
Ion-Sensitive Field-Effect Transistors (ISFETs) form a wide-spread technology for sensing, thanks to their label-free detection and intrinsic CMOS compatibility. Their current sensitivity, {\Delta}ID/ID, for a given {\Delta}pH, however, is limited by the thermionic limit for the Subthreshold Slope (SS) of Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistors(MOSFET) and by the Nernst limit. Obtaining ISFETs with a steep slope transfer characteristics is extremely challenging. In this paper we combine the merits of traditional ISFETs with the performance boosts offered by the insertion of a Negative Capacitor in series with the Gate contact. In the proposed tests with NC PZT capacitors, we demonstrate experimentally a reduction of the SS by 44%, combined with a current efficiency improvement of more than two times. As a consequence of the steeper SS, the current sensitivity to pH is improved by 78%.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript experimentally demonstrates that inserting a negative-capacitance PZT capacitor in series with the gate of an ISFET yields a 44% reduction in subthreshold slope, more than 2× improvement in current efficiency, and 78% gain in current sensitivity to pH, by combining conventional ISFET operation with voltage amplification from the NC effect.
Significance. If the NC-induced steepening is stable and free of artifacts, the result would represent a concrete experimental route to exceed both the thermionic SS limit and the Nernst pH sensitivity limit in a CMOS-compatible platform, with direct relevance to label-free biosensing. The work supplies quantitative experimental numbers rather than simulations, which strengthens its potential impact.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the headline claims (44% SS reduction, >2× current efficiency, 78% pH sensitivity gain) are load-bearing on the assumption that the inserted PZT NC capacitor supplies stable, hysteresis-free voltage amplification throughout the pH measurements; however, no C-V hysteresis width, gate-leakage current, or repeated-sweep stability data are reported, leaving open the possibility that the observed steepening is an artifact of leakage or polarization instability.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract would be clearer if it stated the pH range, buffer ionic strength, and reference electrode used for the sensitivity measurements.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful review and positive assessment of the work's significance. We address the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the headline claims (44% SS reduction, >2× current efficiency, 78% pH sensitivity gain) are load-bearing on the assumption that the inserted PZT NC capacitor supplies stable, hysteresis-free voltage amplification throughout the pH measurements; however, no C-V hysteresis width, gate-leakage current, or repeated-sweep stability data are reported, leaving open the possibility that the observed steepening is an artifact of leakage or polarization instability.
Authors: We acknowledge that the manuscript does not report explicit C-V hysteresis width, gate-leakage current, or repeated-sweep stability data for the PZT capacitor. The pH sensitivity results were obtained from multiple device sweeps that showed consistent transfer characteristics, but we agree this does not fully address the referee's concern. We will add the requested measurements (C-V loops, leakage currents, and stability sweeps) as new figures and discussion in the revised manuscript to demonstrate that the NC amplification is stable and hysteresis-free during the reported experiments. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; experimental measurements only
full rationale
The paper reports direct experimental results on SS reduction (44%), current efficiency (>2×), and pH sensitivity gain (78%) from NC PZT insertion in ISFETs. No derivation chain, first-principles prediction, fitted parameter renamed as prediction, or self-citation load-bearing step is present. All claims rest on measured transfer characteristics and pH sweeps, with no equations reducing outputs to inputs by construction. This matches the default expectation for non-circular experimental work.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The subthreshold slope of conventional MOSFETs is limited by the thermionic emission limit and ISFET pH response is limited by the Nernst limit.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Development of an ion-sensitiv e solid-state device for neurophysiological measurements
Bergveld, P. Development of an ion-sensitiv e solid-state device for neurophysiological measurements. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering 1, 70–71 (1970)
work page 1970
-
[2]
Wipf, M. et al. Selective sodium sensing with gold-coated silicon nanowire field-effect transistors in a differential setup. ACS nano 7(7), 5978-5983 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[3]
Rigante, S. et al. Sensing with advanced computing technology: fin field-effect transistors with high-k gate stack on bulk silicon. ACS nano 9(5), 4872-4881 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[4]
Buitrago, E., Fagas, G., Badia, M. F. B., Georgiev, Y. M., Berthomé, M., & Ionescu, A. M. Junctionless silicon nanowire transistors for the tunable operation of a highly sensitive, low power sensor. Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical 183, 1-10 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[5]
Buitrago, E. et al. Electrical characterization of high performance, liquid gated vertically stacked SiNW-based 3D FET biosensors. Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical 199, 291- 300 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[6]
Ahn, J. et al. A pH sensor with a double-gate silicon nanowire field-effect transistor. Applied Physics Letters 102(8), 083701 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[7]
Schwartz, M. et al. DNA dete ction with top–down fabricated silicon nanowire transistor arrays in linear operation regime. Physica status solidi (a) 213(6), 1510-1519 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[8]
Zafar, S., D’Emic, C., Afzali, A., Fletcher, B., Zhu, Y., & Ning, T. Optimization of pH sensing using silicon nanowire field effect transistors with HfO2 as the sensing surface. Nanotechnology 22(40), 405501 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[9]
Accastelli, E., Scarbolo, P., Ernst, T., Palest ri, P., Selmi, L., & Guiducci, C. Multi-wire tri-gate silicon nanowires reaching milli-pH unit resolution in one micron square footprint. Biosensors 6(1), 9 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[10]
Chen, S., Bomer, J. G., Carlen, E. T., & va n den Berg, A. Al2O3/silicon nanoISFET with near ideal Nernstian response. Nano letters 11(6), 2334-2341 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[11]
Kim, S. et al. Silicon nanowire ion sensitive field effect transistor with integrated Ag/AgCl electrode: pH sensin g and noise characteristics. Analyst 136(23), 5012-5016 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[12]
Jang, H. J., & Cho, W. J. Performance enhancement of capacitive-coupling dual-gate ion- sensitive field-effect transistor in ultra-thin-body. Scientific reports 4, 5284 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[13]
Bergveld, P. Thirty years of ISFETOLOGY: What happened in the past 30 years and what may happen in the next 30 years. Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical 88(1), 1-20 (2003)
work page 2003
-
[14]
Nakata, S., Arie, T., Akita, S., & Takei, K. Wearable, flexible, and multifunctional healthcare device with an ISFET chemical sensor for simultaneous sweat pH and skin temperature monitoring. ACS sensors 2(3), 443-448 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[15]
Douthwaite, M., Koutsos, E., Yates, D. C., Mi tcheson, P. D., & Georgiou, P. A thermally powered ISFET array for on-body pH measurement. IEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems 11(6), 1324-1334 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[16]
Garcia-Cordero, E., Bellando, F., Zhang, J., Wildhaber, F., Longo, J., Guërin, H., & Ionescu, A. M. Three-Dimensional Integrated Ultra-Low Volume Passive Microfluidics With Ion Sensitive Field Effect Transist ors For Multi-Parameter Wearable Sweat Analyzers. ACS nano (2018)
work page 2018
-
[17]
Angelidis, P. A. Personalised physical exer cise regime for chronic patients through a wearable ICT platform. International journal of electronic healthcare 5(4), 355-370 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[18]
Wireless integrated biosensors for point-of-care diagnostic applications
Ghafar-Zadeh, E. Wireless integrated biosensors for point-of-care diagnostic applications. Sensors 15(2), 3236-3261 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[19]
Lee, Y. H., Jang, M., Lee, M. Y., Kweon, O. Y., & Oh, J. H. Flexible field-effect transistor-type sensors based on conjugated molecules. Chem 3(5), 724-763 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[20]
Glucose sensing for diabetes monitoring: recent developments
Bruen, D., Delaney, C., Florea, L., & Diamond, D. Glucose sensing for diabetes monitoring: recent developments. Sensors 17(8), 1866 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[21]
Salahuddin, S. & Datta, S. Use of negative cap acitance to provide voltage amplification for low power nanoscale devices. Nano letters 8, 405–410 (2008)
work page 2008
-
[22]
Jo, J. et al. Negative capacitance in organic/ferroelectric capacitor to implement steep switching MOS devices. Nano letters 15, 4553–4556 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[23]
Saeidi, A. et al. Negative capacitance as performance booster for Tunnel FETs and MOSFETs: an experimental study. IEEE Electron Device Letters 38(10), 1485-1488 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[24]
Appleby, D. J. et al. Experimental observation of negative capacitance in ferroelectrics at room temperature. Nano letters 14, 3864–3868 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[25]
Zubko, P. et al. Negative capacitance in multidomain ferroelectric superlattices. Nature 534, 524–528 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[26]
Saeidi, A. et al. Negative capacitance field effect transistors; capacitance matching and non-hysteretic operation. In Solid-State Device Research Conference (ESSDERC), IEEE 2017, 78-81 (IEEE, 2017)
work page 2017
-
[27]
Charge dependent capacitance of Stern layer and capacitance of electrode/electrolyte interface
Velikonja, A., Gongadze, E., Kralj-Iglic, V., & Iglic, A. Charge dependent capacitance of Stern layer and capacitance of electrode/electrolyte interface. Int. J. Electrochem. Sci 9, 5885-5894 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[28]
Starkov, A. & Starkov, I. Asymptotic description of the time and temperature hysteresis in the framework of Landau-Khalatnikov equation. Ferroelectrics 461, 50–60 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[29]
Rusu, A., Saeidi, A., & Ionescu, A. M. Condition for the negative capacitance effect in metal–ferroelectric–insulator–semiconductor devices. Nanotechnology 27(11), 115201 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[30]
Preočanin, T., Šupljika, F., & Kallay, N. Evaluation of interfacial equilibrium constants from surface potential data: silver chloride aqueous interface. Journal of colloid and interface science 337(2), 501-507 (2009). Acknowledgements The authors acknowledge funding of this research from Milli-tech/ERC H2020. The authors also greatly appreciate the contr...
work page 2009
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.