Polymer Electrolyte-Gated Organic Field-Effect Transistors:
Low-Voltage, High-Current Switches for Organic Electronics
and Testbeds for Probing Electrical Transport at High Charge
Carrier Density
posted on 2007-05-23, 00:00authored byMatthew J. Panzer, C. Daniel Frisbie
We report the fabrication and extensive characterization of solid polymer electrolyte-gated organic
field-effect transistors (PEG-FETs) in which a polyethylene oxide (PEO) film containing a dissolved Li salt
is used to modulate the hole conductivity of a polymer semiconductor. The large capacitance (∼10 μF/cm2) of the solution-processed polymer electrolyte gate dielectric facilitates polymer semiconductor
conductivities on the order of 103 S/cm at low gate voltages (<3 V). In PEG-FETs based on regioregular
poly(3-hexylthiophene), gate-induced hole densities were 2 × 1014 charges/cm2 with mobilities >3 cm2/V·s. PEG-FETs fabricated with gate electrodes either aligned or intentionally nonaligned to the channel
exhibited dramatically different electrical behavior when tested in vacuum or in air. Large differences in
ionic diffusivity can explain the dominance of either electrostatic charging (in vacuum) or bulk electrochemical
doping (in air) as the device operational mechanism. The use of a larger anion in the polymer electrolyte,
bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (TFSI-), yielded transistors that showed clear current saturation and
square law behavior in the output characteristics, which also points to electrostatic (field-effect) charging.
In addition, negative transconductances were observed using the PEO/LiTFSI electrolyte for all three polymer
semiconductors at gate voltages larger than −3 V. Bias stress measurements performed with PEO/LiTFSI-gated bottom contact PEG-FETs showed that polymer semiconductors can sustain high ON currents for
greater than 10 min without large losses in conductance. Collectively, the results indicate that PEG-FETs
may serve as useful devices for high-current/low-voltage applications and as testbeds for probing electrical
transport in polymer semiconductors at high charge density.