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  <title><![CDATA[New Transistor for Plastic Electronics Exhibits the Best of Both Worlds]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>In the quest to develop flexible plastic electronics, one of
the stumbling blocks has been creating transistors with enough stability for
them to function in a variety of environments while still maintaining the
current needed to power the devices. Online in the journal <em>Advanced Materials,</em> researchers from the Georgia Institute of
Technology describe a new method of combining top-gate organic field-effect
transistors with a bilayer gate insulator. This allows the transistor to
perform with incredible stability while exhibiting good current performance. In
addition, the transistor can be mass produced in a regular atmosphere and can
be created using lower temperatures, making it compatible with the plastic
devices it will power.</p>



<p>The research team used an existing semiconductor and changed
the gate dielectric because transistor performance depends not only on the
semiconductor itself, but also on the interface between the semiconductor and
the gate dielectric. </p>



<p>“Rather than using a single dielectric material, as many
have done in the past, we developed a bilayer gate dielectric,” said Bernard
Kippelen, director of the Center for Organic Photonics and Electronics and
professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Electrical and Computer Engineering. </p>



<p>The bilayer dielectric is made of a fluorinated polymer
known as CYTOP and a high-<em>k</em>
metal-oxide layer created by atomic layer deposition. Used alone, each
substance has its benefits and its drawbacks. </p>



<p>CYTOP is known to form few defects at the interface of the
organic semiconductor, but it also has a very low dielectric constant, which
requires an increase in drive voltage. The high-<em>k</em> metal-oxide uses low voltage, but doesn’t have good stability
because of a high number of defects on the interface. </p>



<p>So, Kippelen and his team wondered what would happen if they
combined the two substances in a bilayer. Would the drawbacks cancel each other
out? </p>



<p>“When we started to do the test experiments, the results
were stunning. We were expecting good stability, but not to the point of having
no degradation in mobility for more than a year,” said Kippelen.</p>





<p>The team performed a battery of tests to see just how stable
the bilayer was. They cycled the transistors 20,000 times. There was no
degradation. They tested it under a continuous bias stress where they ran the
highest possible current through it. There was no degradation. They even stuck
it in a plasma chamber for five minutes. There was still no degradation. </p>

<p>The only time they saw any degradation was when they dropped
it into acetone for an hour. There was some degradation, but the transistor was
still operational. </p>



<p>No one was more surprised than Kippelen. </p>



<p>“I had always questioned the concept of having air-stable
field-effect transistors, because I thought you would always have to combine
the transistors with some barrier coating to protect them from oxygen and
moisture. We’ve proven ourselves wrong through this work,” said Kippelen.</p>



<p>“By having the bilayer gate insulator we have two different
degradation mechanisms that happen at the same time, but the effects are such
that they compensate for one another,” explains Kippelen.&nbsp; “So if you use one it leads to a decrease of
the current, if you use the other it leads to a shift of the thereshold voltage
and over time to an increase of the current. But if you combine them, their
effects cancel out.”</p>



<p>“This is an elegant way of solving the problem. So, rather
than trying to remove each effect, we took two processes that complement one
another and as a result you have a transistor that’s rock stable.”</p>



<p>The transistor conducts current and runs at a voltage
comparable to amorphous silicon, the current industry standard used on glass
substrates, but can be manufactured at temperatures below 150<strong>°</strong>C, in line with the capabilities of plastic
substrates. It can also be created in a regular atmosphere, making it easier to
fabricate than other transistors. </p>



<p>Applications for these transistors include smart bandages,
RFID tags, plastic solar cells, light emitters for smart cards – virtually any
application where stable power and a flexible surface are needed. </p>



<p>In this paper the tests were performed on glass
substrates.&nbsp; Next, the team plans on
demonstrating the transistors on flexible plastic substrates. Then they will
test the ability to manufacture the bilayer transistors with ink jet printing
technologies. </p>



<p><em>Kippelen’s research
team was comprised of Do Kyung Hwang, Canek Fuentes-Hernandez, Jungbae Kim,
William J. Postcavage Jr. and Sung-Jin Kim.</em></p>



<p><em>The research was
supported by Solvay, the Office of Naval Research and the National Science
Foundation.</em></p>]]></body>
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      <value>2011-01-27T00:00:00-05:00</value>
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      <value><![CDATA[COPE develops transistor with excellent stability and performance for use on plastic electronics.]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Bernard Kippelen and his research team at the Center for Organic Photonics and Electronics have developed a transistor with excellent stability and performance for use on plastic electronics.</p>]]></value>
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            <title><![CDATA[Top-Gate Organic Field-Effect Transistor with Bilayer Gate Insulator]]></title>
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                  <image_alt><![CDATA[Top-Gate Organic Field-Effect Transistor with Bilayer Gate Insulator]]></image_alt>
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      <email><![CDATA[david.terraso@comm.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p><strong>Georgia Tech Media Relations</strong><br />Laura Diamond<br /><a href="mailto:laura.diamond@comm.gatech.edu">laura.diamond@comm.gatech.edu</a><br />404-894-6016<br />Jason Maderer<br /><a href="mailto:maderer@gatech.edu">maderer@gatech.edu</a><br />404-660-2926</p>]]></value>
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