Font Size: a A A

Electrical characterization of organic thin film transistors and alternative device architectures

Posted on:2006-06-11Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:University of MinnesotaCandidate:Newman, Christopher RFull Text:PDF
GTID:2458390005492687Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
In the last 10--15 years, organic semiconductors have evolved from experimental curiosities into viable alternatives for practical applications involving large-area and low-cost electronics such as display backplanes, electronic paper, radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, and solar cells. Many of the initially-stated goals in this field have been achieved; organic semconductors have demonstrated performance comparable to or greater than amorphous silicon (a-Si), the entrenched technology for most of the applications listed above. At present, the major obstacles remaining to commercialization of devices based on organic semiconductors involve material stability, processing considerations and optimization of the other device components (e.g. metal contacts and dielectric materials). Despite these technical achievements, significant gaps remain in our understanding of the underlying transport physics in these devices.; This thesis summarizes experiments performed on organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) in an attempt to address some of these knowledge gaps. The FET, in addition to being a very useful device for practical applications (such as the driving elements in pixel backplanes), is also a very flexible architecture from an experimental standpoint. The presence of a capacitively-coupled gate electrode allows the investigation of transport physics as a function of carrier concentration. For devices in which non-idealities (i.e. carrier traps) largely dictate the observed characteristics, this is a very useful feature. Although practical OFETs are fabricated as conventional single-gate structures on an organic thin film (OTFTs), more exotic structures can often provide insights that standard OTFTs cannot. Specifically, single-crystal OFETs allow the investigation of carrier transport in the absence of grain boundaries, and double-gated OTFTs facilitate the investigation and comparison of properties across two discrete interfaces.; One of the remaining challenges in terms of achieving stability inorganic semiconductors involves understanding, and hopefully minimizing, the bias stress effect of operating OTFTs. Largely ignored during the years in which research groups sought to optimize the standard device metrics of field-effect mobility, current on/off ratio, and threshold voltage, operational stability is emerging as a dominant consideration in these materials. Experiments performed with the goal of quantifying and understanding the bias-stress effect in organic semiconductors are described at the end of this thesis.
Keywords/Search Tags:Organic, Device
Related items