Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of the Degree of the Gate‐Dielectric Surface Roughness on the Performance of Bottom‐Gate Organic Thin‐Film Transistors

Michael Geiger, Rachana Acharya, Eric Reutter, Thomas Ferschke, Ute Zschieschang, J. Weis, Jens Pflaum, Hagen Klauk, R. Thomas Weitz

2020Advanced Materials Interfaces93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In organic thin‐film transistors (TFTs) fabricated in the inverted (bottom‐gate) device structure, the surface roughness of the gate dielectric onto which the organic‐semiconductor layer is deposited is expected to have a significant effect on the TFT characteristics. To quantitatively evaluate this effect, a method to tune the surface roughness of a gate dielectric consisting of a thin layer of aluminum oxide and an alkylphosphonic acid self‐assembled monolayer over a wide range by controlling a single process parameter, namely the substrate temperature during the deposition of the aluminum gate electrodes, is developed. All other process parameters remain constant in the experiments, so that any differences observed in the TFT performance can be confidently ascribed to effects related to the difference in the gate‐dielectric surface roughness. It is found that an increase in surface roughness leads to a significant decrease in the effective charge‐carrier mobility and an increase in the subthreshold swing. It is shown that a larger gate‐dielectric surface roughness leads to a larger density of grain boundaries in the semiconductor layer, which in turn produces a larger density of localized trap states in the semiconductor.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceGate dielectricThin-film transistorDielectricSurface roughnessOptoelectronicsGate oxideTransistorMonolayerSubstrate (aquarium)Surface finishHigh-κ dielectricLayer (electronics)NanotechnologyComposite materialElectrical engineeringVoltageEngineeringGeologyOceanographyOrganic Electronics and PhotovoltaicsThin-Film Transistor TechnologiesAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials