Spray-on liquid-metal electrodes for graphene field-effect transistors

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Abstract

Advancements in flexible circuit interconnects are critical for widespread adoption of flexible electronics. Non-toxic liquid-metals offer a viable solution for flexible electrodes due to deformability and low bulk resistivity. However, fabrication processes utilizing liquid-metals suffer from high complexity, low throughput, and significant production cost. Our team utilized an inexpensive spray-on stencil technique to deposit liquid-metal Galinstan electrodes in top-gated graphene field-effect transistors (GFETs). The electrode stencils were patterned using an automated vinyl cutter and positioned directly onto chemical vapor deposition (CVD) graphene transferred to polyethylene terephthalate (PET) substrates. Our spray-on method exhibited a throughput of 28 transistors in under five minutes on the same graphene sample, with a 96% yield for all devices down to a channel length of 50 μm. The fabricated transistors possess hole and electron mobilities of 663.5 cm 2 /(V·s) and 689.9 cm 2 /(V·s), respectively, and support a simple and effective method of developing high-yield flexible electronics.

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Melcher, J. L., Elassy, K. S., Ordonez, R. C., Hayashi, C., Ohta, A. T., & Garmire, D. (2019). Spray-on liquid-metal electrodes for graphene field-effect transistors. Micromachines, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10010054

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