Enhancement of carrier mobilities of organic semiconductors on sol-gel dielectrics: investigations of molecular organization and interfacial chemistry effects

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Abstract

The dielectric-semiconductor interfacial interactions critically influence the morphology and molecular ordering of the organic semiconductor molecules, and hence have a profound influence on mobility, threshold voltage, and other vital device characteristics of organic field-effect transistors. In this study, p-channel small molecule/polymer (evaporated pentacene and spin-coated poly(3,3‴;-didodecylquarterthiophene) - PQT) and n-channel fullerene derivative ({6}-1-(3-(2-thienylethoxycarbonyl)-propyl)-{5}-1-phenyl-[5,6]-C61 - TEPP-C61) show a significant enhancement in device mobilities ranging from ∼6 to ∼45 times higher for all classes of semiconductors deposited on sol-gel silica gate-dielectric than on pristine/octyltrichlorosilane (OTS)-treated thermally grown silica. Atomic force microscopy, synchrotron X-ray diffraction, photoluminescence/absorption, and Raman spectroscopy studies provide comprehensive evidences that sol-gel silica dielectrics-induced enhancement in both p- and n-channel organic semiconductors is attributable to better molecular ordering/packing, and hence reduced charge trapping centers due to lesser structural defects at the dielectric-semiconductor interface. © 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.

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Cahyadi, T., Kasim, J., Tan, H. S., Kulkarni, S. R., Ong, B. S., Wu, Y., … Mhaisalkar, S. G. (2009). Enhancement of carrier mobilities of organic semiconductors on sol-gel dielectrics: investigations of molecular organization and interfacial chemistry effects. Advanced Functional Materials, 19(3), 378–385. https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.200800929

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