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Ultralow contact resistance in organic transistors via orbital hybridization.

Junpeng ZengDaowei HeJingsi QiaoYating LiLi SunWeisheng LiJiacheng XieSi GaoLijia PanPeng WangYong XuYun LiHao QiuYi ShiJian-Bin XuWei JiXiaomu Wang
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) are of interest in unconventional form of electronics. However, high-performance OFETs are currently contact-limited, which represent a major challenge toward operation in the gigahertz regime. Here, we realize ultralow total contact resistance (R c ) down to 14.0 Ω ∙ cm in C 10 -DNTT OFETs by using transferred platinum (Pt) as contact. We observe evidence of Pt-catalyzed dehydrogenation of side alkyl chains which effectively reduces the metal-semiconductor van der Waals gap and promotes orbital hybridization. We report the ultrahigh performance OFETs, including hole mobility of 18 cm 2  V -1 s -1 , saturation current of 28.8 μA/μm, subthreshold swing of 60 mV/dec, and intrinsic cutoff frequency of 0.36 GHz. We further develop resist-free transfer and patterning strategies to fabricate large-area OFET arrays, showing 100% yield and excellent variability in the transistor metrics. As alkyl chains widely exist in conjugated molecules and polymers, our strategy can potentially enhance the performance of a broad range of organic optoelectronic devices.
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