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Pentacene organic field-effect phototransistor with memory effect
Author(s) -
Maarten Debucquoy,
Stijn Verlaak,
Soeren Stoedel,
Stijn De Vusser,
Jan Genoe,
Paul Heremans
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
proceedings of spie, the international society for optical engineering/proceedings of spie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.192
H-Index - 176
eISSN - 1996-756X
pISSN - 0277-786X
DOI - 10.1117/12.667246
Subject(s) - pentacene , photocurrent , photodetector , photodiode , optoelectronics , materials science , organic solar cell , signal (programming language) , transistor , organic semiconductor , organic electronics , response time , thin film transistor , computer science , electrical engineering , nanotechnology , voltage , engineering , polymer , computer graphics (images) , layer (electronics) , composite material , programming language
Now organic thin film transistor technology gains growing maturity, high performance organic photodetectors are the missing link towards full organic photosensitive sensor arrays, needed for the realization of applications like organic scanners and organic cameras. In the borderline of the research in organic solar cells, research in organic photodetectors has mainly been limited to organic photodiodes. However, phototransistors offer the possibility to reach higher sensitivities, thanks to the internal current gain of a transistor structure. This document focuses on organic field-effect phototransistors (organic photoFETs) where illumination can be used as an optical gate signal in addition to the electrical gate signal. An experimental description of pentacene photoFETs during broadband illumination is given. A distinction between the direct photocurrent and the additional current enhancement by a thresholdshift can be made, and a relation for this thresholdshift in function of time is revealed. Consequently, the difficulty to compare different organic photoFETs without any information about the illumination time is highlighted and a comparison based on this power law is proposed. Subsequently it is pointed out that by the stability of this thresholdshift after illumination, the pentacene photoFET does not only act as a light detector but also as a memory element, capable to store information about illumination power and duration for an extended amount of time.status: publishe

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