17 research outputs found

    Digital power and performance analysis of inkjet printed ring oscillators based on electrolyte-gated oxide electronics

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    Printed electronic components offer certain technological advantages over their silicon based counterparts, like mechanical flexibility, low process temperatures, maskless and additive manufacturing possibilities. However, to be compatible to the fields of smart sensors, Internet of Things, and wearables, it is essential that devices operate at small supply voltages. In printed electronics, mostly silicon dioxide or organic dielectrics with low dielectric constants have been used as gate isolators, which in turn have resulted in high power transistors operable only at tens of volts. Here, we present inkjet printed circuits which are able to operate at supply voltages as low as <= 2 V. Our transistor technology is based on lithographically patterned drive electrodes, the dimensions of which are carefully kept well within the printing resolutions; the oxide semiconductor, the electrolytic insulator and the top-gate electrodes have been inkjet printed. Our inverters show a gain of similar to 4 and 2.3 ms propagation delay time at 1 V supply voltage. Subsequently built 3-stage ring oscillators start to oscillate at a supply voltage of only 0.6 V with a frequency of similar to 255 Hz and can reach frequencies up to similar to 350 Hz at 2 V supply voltage. Furthermore, we have introduced a systematic methodology for characterizing ring oscillators in the printed electronics domain, which has been largely missing. Benefiting from this procedure, we are now able to predict the switching capacitance and driver capability at each stage, as well as the power consumption of our inkjet printed ring oscillators. These achievements will be essential for analyzing the performance and power characteristics of future inkjet printed digital circuits

    Printed Electronics Based on Inorganic Semiconductors: From Processes and Materials to Devices

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    Following the ever-expanding technological demands, printed electronics has shown palpable potential to create new and commercially viable technologies that will benefit from its unique characteristics, such as, large-area and wide range of substrate compatibility, conformability and low-cost. Through the last few decades, printed/solution-processed field-effect transistors (FETs) and circuits have witnessed immense research efforts, technological growth and increased commercial interests. Although printing of functional inks comprising organic semiconductors has already been initiated in early 1990s, gradually the attention, at least partially, has been shifted to various forms of inorganic semiconductors, starting from metal chalcogenides, oxides, carbon nanotubes and very recently to graphene and other 2D semiconductors. In this review, the entire domain of printable inorganic semiconductors is considered. In fact, thanks to the continuous development of materials/functional inks and novel design/printing strategies, the inorganic printed semiconductor-based circuits today have reached an operation frequency up to several hundreds of kilohertz with only a few nanosecond time delays at the individual FET/inverter levels; in this regard, often circuits based on hybrid material systems have been found to be advantageous. At the end, a comparison of relative successes of various printable inorganic semiconductor materials, the remaining challenges and the available future opportunities are summarized

    Compact modeling of inkjet printed, high mobility, electrolyte-gated transistors

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    High mobility, electrolyte-gated transistors (EGTs) show high DC performance at low voltages (< 2 V). To model those EGTs, we have used different models for the below and the above threshold regime with appropriate interpolation to ensure continuity and smoothness over all regimes. This empirical model matches very well with our measured results obtained by the electrical characterization of EGTs

    Room-Temperature Processing of Printed Oxide FETs Using Ultraviolet Photonic Curing

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    Oxide semiconductors are highly suitable materials for solution-processed/printed electronics (PE); the growing interest in them can be related to their excellent intrinsic properties, such as high mobility, optical transparency, thermal and environmental stability, and so on. However, high process temperatures remain as the foremost challenge that may limit the compatibility of printed oxide electronics to inexpensive flexible substrates. Here, the possibility of using photonic curing methods to lower the process temperature is investigated, even down to room temperature (RT). Two distinct ultraviolet (UV) curing techniques, involving UV-visible light pulses and continuous-wave UV lasers are exercised and compared. Combining UV curing with oxide nanoparticulate channel layer and electrolytic gate insulators, it is demonstrated that high performance field-effect transistors (FETs) with device mobility as high as 12 cm(2) V-1 s(-1) can be processed entirely at room temperature and realized on plastic substrates. The fabrication steps include printing of a heavily stabilized semiconducting nanoparticulate channel layer, followed by decomposition and removal of the semi-insulating polymer ligands using UV-photon energies. The curing process is found to be fast and high-throughput manufacturing technique compatible. At the same time, the energy requirement to remove the polymer stabilizers is insignificant, thereby ensuring no temperature rise of the parent substrates

    Structure and conductivity of epitaxial thin films of barium ferrite and its hydrated form BaFeO2.5−x+δ (OH)2x

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    Barium ferrite and its hydrated form (BaFeO2.5−x+δ (OH)2x , BFO) is an interesting cathode material for protonic ceramic fuel cells (PCFC) due to its potential to be both, conducting for electrons and protons. We report on the fabrication of almost epitaxially grown thin films (22 nm) of barium ferrite BaFeO~2.5 (BFO) on Nb-doped SrTiO3 substrates via pulsed laser deposition (PLD), followed by treatment under inert, and subsequently wet inert atmospheres to induce water (respectively proton) incorporation. Microstructure, chemical composition and conducting properties are investigated for the BFO films and their hydrated forms, highlighting the influence of hydration on the conductivity characteristics between ~200–290 K. We find that water incorporation gives a strong enhancement of the conductivity to ~10−9 S cm−1 compared to argon annealed films, inducing electronic and protonic charge carriers at the same time. In comparison to bulk powders, proton conductivity is found to be strongly suppressed in such thin hydrated BFO films, pointing towards the influence of strain on the conductivity, which is evaluated based on a detailed investigation by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy

    Ink-Jet Printed CMOS Electronics from Oxide Semiconductors

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    Complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology with high transconductance and signal gain is mandatory for practicable digital/analog logic electronics. However, high performance all-oxide CMOS logics are scarcely reported in the literature; specifically, not at all for solution-processed/printed transistors. As a major step toward solution-processed all-oxide electronics, here it is shown that using a highly efficient electrolyte-gating approach one can obtain printed and low-voltage operated oxide CMOS logics with high signal gain (approximate to 21 at a supply voltage of only 1.5 V) and low static power dissipation
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