TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental and numerical investigation of contact doping effects in dinaphthothienothiophene thin-film transistors
AU - Yamamoto, Ryo
AU - Noda, Kei
AU - Wada, Yasuo
AU - Toyabe, Toru
PY - 2017/1/1
Y1 - 2017/1/1
N2 - Contact doping effects in p-channel dinaphthothienothiophene (DNTT) thin-film transistors with a bottom-gate, top-contact configuration were investigated with both experimental and numerical approach. Characteristic variation in transistor parameters such as the gate threshold voltage and the field-effect mobility for devices with various channel lengths was suppressed by the contact doping with tetrafluorotetracyanoquinodimethane (F4TCNQ) as an acceptor dopant. The gate-voltage dependence of contact resistance and channel resistance was also evaluated separately to examine the contact doping effect in detail. In addition, device simulation considering a Schottky barrier at a metal/semiconductor interface successfully reproduced the experimental current-voltage characteristics by using a hole concentration of the active DNTT layer in the order of 1017cm-3, which was estimated by capacitance-voltage measurement for a metal/insulator/semiconductor capacitor structure. This study suggests the importance of establishing both the carrier doping and carrier concentration measurements toward realizing practical applications of organic transistors.
AB - Contact doping effects in p-channel dinaphthothienothiophene (DNTT) thin-film transistors with a bottom-gate, top-contact configuration were investigated with both experimental and numerical approach. Characteristic variation in transistor parameters such as the gate threshold voltage and the field-effect mobility for devices with various channel lengths was suppressed by the contact doping with tetrafluorotetracyanoquinodimethane (F4TCNQ) as an acceptor dopant. The gate-voltage dependence of contact resistance and channel resistance was also evaluated separately to examine the contact doping effect in detail. In addition, device simulation considering a Schottky barrier at a metal/semiconductor interface successfully reproduced the experimental current-voltage characteristics by using a hole concentration of the active DNTT layer in the order of 1017cm-3, which was estimated by capacitance-voltage measurement for a metal/insulator/semiconductor capacitor structure. This study suggests the importance of establishing both the carrier doping and carrier concentration measurements toward realizing practical applications of organic transistors.
KW - Carrier concentration
KW - Contact doping
KW - Device simulation
KW - Dinaphthothienothiophene (DNTT)
KW - Organic thin-film transistors
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U2 - 10.1541/ieejeiss.137.20
DO - 10.1541/ieejeiss.137.20
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85009348114
SN - 0385-4221
VL - 137
SP - 20
EP - 25
JO - IEEJ Transactions on Electronics, Information and Systems
JF - IEEJ Transactions on Electronics, Information and Systems
IS - 1
ER -