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Photo‐/Thermal‐Responsive Field‐Effect Transistor upon Blending Polymeric Semiconductor with Hexaarylbiimidazole toward Photonically Programmable and Thermally Erasable Memory Device
Author(s) -
Liu Yidong,
Yang Yizhou,
Shi Dandan,
Xiao Mingchao,
Jiang Lang,
Tian Jianwu,
Zhang Guanxin,
Liu Zitong,
Zhang Xisha,
Zhang Deqing
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201902576
Subject(s) - materials science , optoelectronics , irradiation , photochromism , transistor , field effect transistor , thiophene , dielectric , semiconductor , nanotechnology , voltage , organic chemistry , electrical engineering , chemistry , physics , engineering , nuclear physics
It is shown that the semiconducting performance of field‐effect transistors (FETs) with PDPP4T (poly(diketopyrrolopyrrole‐quaterthiophene)) can be reversibly tuned by UV light irradiation and thermal heating after blending with the photochromic hexaarylbiimidazole compound ( p ‐NO 2 ‐HABI). A photo‐/thermal‐responsive FET with a blend thin film of PDPP4T and p ‐NO 2 ‐HABI is successfully fabricated. The transfer characteristics are altered significantly with current enhanced up to 10 6 ‐fold at V G = 0 V after UV light irradiation. However, further heating results in the recovery of the transfer curve. This approach can be extended to other semiconducting polymers such as P3HT (poly(3‐hexyl thiophene)), PBTTT (poly(2,5‐bis(3‐tetradecylthiophen‐2‐yl)thieno[3,2‐b] thiophene)) and PDPPDTT (poly(diketopyrrolopyrrole‐dithienothiophene)). It is hypothesized that TPIRs (2,4,5‐triphenylimidazolyl radicals) formed from p ‐NO 2 ‐HABI after UV light irradiation can interact with charge defects at the gate dielectric–semiconductor interface and those in the semiconducting layer to induce more hole carriers in the semiconducting channel. The application of the blend thin film of PDPP4T and p ‐NO 2 ‐HABI is further demonstrated to fabricate the photonically programmable and thermally erasable FET‐based nonvolatile memory devices that are advantageous in terms of i) high ON/OFF current ratio, ii) nondestructive reading at low electrical bias, and iii) reasonably highly stable ON‐state and OFF‐state.