A Multifunctional Polymer-Graphene Thin-Film Transistor with Tunable Transport Regimes

Abstract

Here we describe a strategy to fabricate multifunctional graphene-polymer hybrid thin-film transistors (PG-TFT) whose transport properties are tunable by varying the deposition conditions of liquid-phase exfoliated graphene (LPE-G) dispersions onto a dielectric surface and <i>via</i> thermal annealing post-treatments. In particular, the ionization energy (IE) of the LPE-G drop-cast on SiO<sub>2</sub> can be finely adjusted prior to polymer deposition <i>via</i> thermal annealing in air environment, exhibiting values gradually changing from 4.8 eV up to 5.7 eV. Such a tunable graphene’s IE determines dramatically different electronic interactions between the LPE-G and the semiconducting polymer (<i>p</i>- or <i>n</i>-type) sitting on its top, leading to devices where the output current of the PG-TFT can be operated from being completely turned off up to modulable. In fact upon increasing the surface coverage of graphene nanoflakes on the SiO<sub>2</sub> the charge transport properties within the top polymer layer are modified from being semiconducting up to truly conductive (graphite-like). Significantly, when the IE of LPE-G is outside the polymer band gap, the PG-TFT can operate as a multifunctional three terminal switch (transistor) and/or memory device featuring high number of erase-write cycles. Our PG-TFT, based on a fine energy level engineering, represents a memory device operating without the need of a dielectric layer separating a floating gate from the active channel

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