Flexible Nanoscale Amorphous Oxide Transistors with a Gold-Assisted Transfer Method.
Sumaiya WahidAlwin DausVictoria ChenEric PopPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
We present a new approach to achieve nanoscale transistors on ultrathin flexible substrates with conventional electron-beam lithography. Full devices are first fabricated on a gold sacrificial layer covering a rigid silicon substrate, and then coated with a polyimide film and released from the rigid substrate. This approach bypasses nanofabrication constraints on flexible substrates: (i) electron-beam surface charging, (ii) alignment inaccuracy due to the wavy substrate, and (iii) restricted thermal budgets. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate ∼100 nm long indium tin oxide (ITO) transistors on ∼6 μm thin polyimide. This is achieved with sub-20 nm misalignment or overlap between source (or drain) and gate contacts on flexible substrates for the first time. The estimated transit frequency of our well-aligned devices can be up to 3.3 GHz, which can be further improved by optimizing the device structure and performance.