Litcius/Paper detail

Tuning Threshold Voltage of Electrolyte-Gated Transistors by Binary Ion Doping

Kyung Gook Cho, Kyoung Hwan Seol, Min Su Kim, Kihyon Hong, Keun Hyung Lee

2022ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Electrolyte-gated transistors (EGTs) operating at low voltages have attracted significant attention in widespread applications, including neuromorphic devices, nonvolatile memories, chemical/biosensors, and printed electronics. To increase the practicality of the EGTs in electronic circuits, systematic control of threshold voltage (Vth), which determines the power consumption and noise margin of the circuits, is essential. In this study, we present a simple strategy for systematically tuning Vth to almost half of the operating potential range of the EGT by controlling the electrochemical doping of electrolyte ions into organic p-type semiconductors. The type of anion in the ionogel determines Vth as well as other transistor characteristics, such as the subthreshold swing and mobility, because the positive hole carriers are the majority carriers. More importantly, Vth can be finely controlled by binary anion doping using ionogels with two anions with varying molar fractions at a fixed cation. In addition, the binary anion doping successfully controls the inversion characteristics of ion-gated inverters. As unlimited combinations of ion pairs are possible for ionogels, this study opens a route for controlling the device characteristics to expand the practicality and applicability of ionogel-based EGTs for next-generation ionic/electronic devices.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceTransistorDopingElectrolyteOptoelectronicsThreshold voltageIonSubthreshold conductionNanotechnologyElectronic circuitSemiconductorVoltageElectrical engineeringElectrodeChemistryEngineeringOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryAnalytical Chemistry and SensorsAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingConducting polymers and applications