Visible and Near-IR Nano-Optical Components and Systems in CMOS

被引:3
|
作者
Sengupta, Kaushik [1 ]
Hong, Lingyu [2 ]
Zhu, Chengjie [1 ]
Lu, Xuyang [3 ]
机构
[1] Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton,NJ,08544, United States
[2] Apple Inc., Cupertino,CA,95014, United States
[3] University of Michigan, Shanghai Jiaotong Joint Institute, Shanghai, Minhang, China
来源
IEEE Open Journal of the Solid-State Circuits Society | 2021年 / 1卷
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Air quality - Chemical detection - CMOS integrated circuits - Fluorescence - Integrated circuit design - Lenses - Microarrays - Nanophotonics - Optical sensors - Photonic devices - Spectrometers;
D O I
10.1109/OJSSCS.2021.3116563
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Integration of complex optical systems operating in the visible and near-IR range (VIS/NIR), realized in a CMOS fabrication process in an absolutely 'no change' approach, can have a transformative impact in enabling a new class of miniaturized, low-cost, smart optical sensors and imagers for emerging applications. While 'silicon photonics' has demonstrated the path towards such advancements in the IR range, the field of VIS/NIR integrated optics has seen less progress. Therefore, while currently ultra high-density and higher performance image sensors are commonplace in CMOS, all passive optical components (such as lenses, filters, gratings, collimators) that typically constitute a high-performance sensing or imaging system, are non-integrated, bulky and expensive, severely limiting their application domains. Here, we present an approach to utilize the embedded copper-based metal interconnect layers in modern CMOS processes with sub-wavelength feature sizes to realize multi-functional nano-optical structures and components. Based on our prior works, we illustrate this electronic-photonic co-design approach exploiting metal/light interactions and integrated electronics in the 400nm-900 nm wavelengths with three design examples. Realized in 65-nm CMOS, these demonstrate for the first time: fully integrated multiplexed fluorescence based biosensors with integrated filters, optical spectrometer, and CMOS optical physically unclonable function (PUF). These examples cover a range of optical processing elements in silicon, from deep sub-wavelength nano-optics to diffractive structures. We will demonstrate that when co-designed with embedded photo-detection and signal processing circuitry, this approach can lead to a new class of millimeter-scale, intelligent optical sensors for a wide range of emerging applications in healthcare, diagnostics, smart sensing, food, air quality, environment monitoring and others. © 2021 IEEE.
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页码:247 / 262
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