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Sub-thermionic, ultra-high-gain organic transistors and circuits

Authors :
Weisheng Li
Zhong Ma
Yang Yang
Danfeng Pan
Xiaoqing Chen
Junpeng Zeng
Jun Xie
Ling Li
Paddy K. L. Chan
Wenxing Huo
Zhongzhong Luo
Xue Feng
Lijia Pan
Xinran Wang
Wanqing Meng
Zhihao Yu
Ying Zhao
Xian Huang
Daowei He
Yang Lu
Ming Liu
Rongfang Lan
Hongkai Ning
Jiawei Wang
Xuecou Tu
Yi Shi
Dongquan Shi
Boyu Peng
Ke Cao
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

The development of organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) with low power consumption and high gain will advance many flexible electronics. Here, by combining solution-processed monolayer organic crystal, ferroelectric HfZrOx gating and van der Waals fabrication, we realize flexible OTFTs that simultaneously deliver high transconductance and sub-60 mV/dec switching, under one-volt operating voltage. The overall optimization of transconductance, subthreshold swing and output resistance leads to transistor intrinsic gain and amplifier voltage gain over 5.3 × 104 and 1.1 × 104, respectively, which outperform existing technologies using organics, oxides and low-dimensional nanomaterials. We further demonstrate battery-powered, integrated wearable electrocardiogram (ECG) and pulse sensors that can amplify human physiological signal by 900 times with high fidelity. The sensors are capable of detecting weak ECG waves (undetectable even by clinical equipment) and diagnosing arrhythmia and atrial fibrillation. Our sub-thermionic OTFT is promising for battery/wireless powered yet performance demanding applications such as electronic skins and radio-frequency identification tags, among many others.<br />Exploiting negative capacitance effects in organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) is advantageous for enhancing device performance. Here, the authors report solution-processed sub-thermionic OTFTs and circuits with ferroelectric hafnium oxides that show ultra-low power and ultra-high gain.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....65b9813a0a1db5d143cd828b2e171406