Moderate doping leads to high performance of semiconductor/insulator polymer blend transistors

  • Guanghao Lu
  • , James Blakesley
  • , Scott Himmelberger
  • , Patrick Pingel
  • , Johannes Frisch
  • , Ingo Lieberwirth
  • , Ingo Salzmann
  • , Martin Oehzelt
  • , Riccardo Di Pietro
  • , Alberto Salleo
  • , Norbert Koch
  • , Dieter Neher

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

265 Scopus citations

Abstract

Polymer transistors are being intensively developed for next-generation flexible electronics. Blends comprising a small amount of semiconducting polymer mixed into an insulating polymer matrix have simultaneously shown superior performance and environmental stability in organic field-effect transistors compared with the neat semiconductor. Here we show that such blends actually perform very poorly in the undoped state, and that mobility and on/off ratio are improved dramatically upon moderate doping. Structural investigations show that these blend layers feature nanometre-scale semiconductor domains and a vertical composition gradient. This particular morphology enables a quasi three-dimensional spatial distribution of semiconductor pathways within the insulating matrix, in which charge accumulation and depletion via a gate bias is substantially different from neat semiconductor, and where high on-current and low off-current are simultaneously realized in the stable doped state. Adding only 5 wt% of a semiconducting polymer to a polystyrene matrix, we realized an environmentally stable inverter with gain up to 60.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1588
JournalNature Communications
Volume4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2013
Externally publishedYes

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