Field-Driven Athermal Activation of Amorphous Metal Oxide Semiconductors for Flexible Programmable Logic Circuits and Neuromorphic Electronics.
Mohit Rameshchandra KulkarniRohit Abraham JohnNidhi TiwariAmoolya NirmalSi En NgAnh Chien NguyenNripan MathewsPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2019)
Despite extensive research, large-scale realization of metal-oxide electronics is still impeded by high-temperature fabrication, incompatible with flexible substrates. Ideally, an athermal treatment modifying the electronic structure of amorphous metal oxide semiconductors (AMOS) to generate sufficient carrier concentration would help mitigate such high-temperature requirements, enabling realization of high-performance electronics on flexible substrates. Here, a novel field-driven athermal activation of AMOS channels is demonstrated via an electrolyte-gating approach. Facilitating migration of charged oxygen species across the semiconductor-dielectric interface, this approach modulates the local electronic structure of the channel, generating sufficient carriers for charge transport and activating oxygen-compensated thin films. The thin-film transistors (TFTs) investigated here depict an enhancement of linear mobility from 51 to 105.25 cm2 V-1 s-1 (ionic-gated) and from 8.09 to 14.49 cm2 V-1 s-1 (back-gated), by creating additional oxygen vacancies. The accompanying stochiometric transformations, monitored via spectroscopic measurements (X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy) corroborate the detailed electrical (TFT, current evolution) parameter analyses, providing critical insights into the underlying oxygen-vacancy generation mechanism and clearly demonstrating field-induced activation as a promising alternative to conventional high-temperature annealing strategies. Facilitating on-demand active programing of the operation modes of transistors (enhancement vs depletion), this technique paves way for facile fabrication of logic circuits and neuromorphic transistors for bioinspired computing.
Keyphrases
- high temperature
- solid state
- room temperature
- high resolution
- ionic liquid
- signaling pathway
- molecular docking
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- quantum dots
- magnetic resonance imaging
- low cost
- drug induced
- mass spectrometry
- highly efficient
- gold nanoparticles
- replacement therapy
- atomic force microscopy
- metal organic framework
- endothelial cells
- genetic diversity
- electron transfer