Photonic curing of sol-gel derived HfO2 dielectrics for organic field-effect transistors

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Kornelius Tetzner - , Technical University of Berlin (Author)
  • Kurt A. Schroder - , LLC (NovaCentrix) (Author)
  • Karlheinz Bock - , Fraunhofer Research Institution for Microsystems and Solid State Technologies (EMFT), Technical University of Berlin (Author)

Abstract

An efficient way to reduce the supply voltages of organic field-effect transistors is the use of high-k inorganic materials. In order to allow high throughput during fabrication, solution-based processes for realizing inorganic dielectrics by using sol-gel procedures have become attractive in recent years. However, this procedure typically involves extended high-temperature annealing steps to achieve high-quality insulating layers which hampers fast fabrication and is incompatible to be carried out on low-temperature organic substrates. In this work, the use of a photonic curing technique is presented for the annealing of sol-gel derived hafnium oxide (HfO2) dielectrics within a few seconds. The investigations demonstrate the reduction of the leakage current density of more than 3 orders of magnitude after the photonic curing process reaching only slightly higher values as obtained with dielectric films formed from highly sophisticated atomic layer deposition. Moreover, capacitance measurements reveal a dielectric constant of 26 indicating bulk-like properties. Furthermore, organic transistors based on photonically cured HfO2 sol-gel dielectrics are fabricated and characterized operating at low voltages (<2 V), low subthreshold swing (110 mV/decade) and charge carrier mobilities of 1 cm2/Vs using a semiconducting liquid-crystal polymer.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)15753-15761
Number of pages9
JournalCeramics international
Volume40
Issue number10
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2014
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-0757-3325/work/139064934

Keywords

Keywords

  • Inorganic dielectrics, Organic field-effect transistors, Photonic curing, Sol-gel, Solution-based processes