2005 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session A5: Physics of Emerging Organic Displays - OLEDs and PLEDs
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Monday, March 21, 2005
LACC
Room: 502B
Sponsoring
Unit:
FIAP
Chair: Geoffrey Nunes, Dupont
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.A5.5
Abstract: A5.00005 : Organic Thin Film Transistors for Electronic Systems
10:24 AM–11:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Michael Kane
(Sarnoff Corporation)
The surge of interest in organic thin film transistors (TFTs) has been
motivated, on the one hand, by fundamental questions concerning the
energetics and transport of localized carriers, and, on the other hand, by
the practical advantages of electronic systems fabricated at low
temperatures on flexible substrates. The overriding consideration for the
usefulness of organic thin-film transistors for electronic systems has been
the field-effect mobility. In this paper I will discuss materials-related
factors other than mobility that influence the usefulness of organic TFTs.
The subthreshold slope determines the voltage excursion that must take place
below the threshold voltage to fully turn off the transistor. Typical
organic TFTs have subthreshold slopes that are small compared to silicon
devices, due to strongly localized states in energy gap between the more
extended levels. The excursion required below threshold often has about the
same magnitude as that required above threshold to reach a given level of
on-current, and the speed of the system, as well as the power supply
requirements, can be adversely affected by the additional required voltage
swing.
Organic TFTs use metallic or conducting polymer contacts that overlap the
gate region, unlike the doped source and drain regions that are self-aligned
to the gate in high-performance silicon technologies. A self-aligned process
has not been developed for organic TFTs, and, as a result, in organic TFTs
there are large parasitic capacitances that can limit system performance. If
the amount of overlap is fixed by registration capabilities and can not be
reduced as channel length $L$ is reduced, the well-known silicon scaling law in
which the upper frequency limit $f_{max}$ scales as 1/$L^{2}$ is modified to$ f_{max}$
$\sim $ 1/$L$, altering significantly the economics of increased integration.
The usefulness of organic TFTs is hindered by the lack of a technology that
provides complementary $n$-channel and $p$-channel transistors on the same
substrate. A good case can be made that the benefits of a complementary
technology outweigh the gains achieved from modest improvements in
single-channel device mobility, and that more effort to develop organic CMOS
is warranted.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.A5.5