Effect of non-chlorinated mixed solvents on charge transport and morphology of solution-processed polymer field-effect transistors

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Wen Ya Lee - , Stanford University (Author)
  • Gaurav Giri - , Stanford University (Author)
  • Ying Diao - , Stanford University (Author)
  • Christopher J. Tassone - , Stanford University (Author)
  • James R. Matthews - , Corning Incorporated (Author)
  • Michael L. Sorensen - , Corning Incorporated (Author)
  • Stefan C.B. Mannsfeld - , SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (Author)
  • Wen Chang Chen - , National Taiwan University (Author)
  • Hon H. Fong - , Shanghai Jiao Tong University (Author)
  • Jeffrey B.H. Tok - , Stanford University (Author)
  • Michael F. Toney - , Stanford University (Author)
  • Mingqian He - , Corning Incorporated (Author)
  • Zhenan Bao - , Stanford University (Author)

Abstract

Using non-chlorinated solvents for polymer device fabrication is highly desirable to avoid the negative environmental and health effects of chlorinated solvents. Here, a non-chlorinated mixed solvent system, composed by a mixture of tetrahydronaphthalene and p-xylene, is described for processing a high mobility donor-acceptor fused thiophene-diketopyrrolopyrrole copolymer (PTDPPTFT4) in thin film transistors. The effects of the use of a mixed solvent system on the device performance, e.g., charge transport, morphology, and molecular packing, are investigated. p-Xylene is chosen to promote polymer aggregation in solution, while a higher boiling point solvent, tetrahydronaphthalene, is used to allow a longer evaporation time and better solubility, which further facilitates morphological tuning. By optimizing the ratio of the two solvents, the charge transport characteristics of the polymer semiconductor device are observed to significantly improve for polymer devices deposited by spin coating and solution shearing. Average charge carrier mobilities of 3.13 cm2 V -1 s-1 and a maximum value as high as 3.94 cm2 V-1 s-1 are obtained by solution shearing. The combination of non-chlorinated mixed solvents and the solution shearing film deposition provide a practical and environmentally-friendly approach to achieve high performance polymer transistor devices. A non-chlorinated mixed solvent system, composed by tetrahydronaphthalene and p-xylene, is demonstrated for high mobility thin film transistors. By optimizing the ratio of the two solvents, charge transport characteristics are significantly improved for polymer devices deposited by spin coating and solution shearing. The non-chlorinated mixed solvents provide a practical and environmentally-friendly approach to achieve high performance polymer transistor devices.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3524-3534
Number of pages11
JournalAdvanced functional materials
Volume24
Issue number23
Publication statusPublished - 18 Jun 2014
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

Research priority areas of TU Dresden

Keywords

  • organic semiconductors, solution processing, solution shearing, thin-film transistors