Publication | Closed Access
Effect of oxygen on the electrical characteristics of field effect transistors formed from electrochemically deposited films of poly(3-methylthiophene)
97
Citations
29
References
1991
Year
Materials ScienceElectrical CharacteristicsElectrical EngineeringField EffectEngineeringSemiconducting PolymerFlexible ElectronicsOrganic ElectronicsField Effect TransistorsField Effect DevicesConducting PolymerApplied PhysicsDrain ElectrodesOrganic SemiconductorConjugated PolymerPolymer ChemistryElectrochemistryElectrical Insulation
Field effect devices have been formed in which the active layer is a thin film of poly(3-methylthiophene) grown electrochemically onto preformed source and drain electrodes. Although a field effect is present after electrochemical undoping, stable device characteristics with a high modulation ratio are obtained only after vacuum annealing at an elevated temperature, and only then if the devices are held in vacuo. The polymer is shown to be p type and the devices operate in accumulation only. The hole mobility in devices thermally annealed under vacuum is around 10-3 cm2 V-1 s-1. On exposure to ambient laboratory air, the device conductance increases by several orders of magnitude. This increase may be reversed by subjecting the device to a further high-temperature anneal under vacuum. Subsidiary experiments show that these effects are caused by the reversible doping of the polymer by gaseous oxygen.
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