Abstract
Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) hold promise for developing a variety of high-performance (bio-)electronic devices/circuits. While OECTs based on p-type semiconductors have achieved tremendous progress in recent years, n-type OECTs still suffer from low performance, hampering the development of power-efficient electronics. Here, it is demonstrated that fine-tuning the molecular weight of the rigid, ladder-type n-type polymer poly(benzimidazobenzophenanthroline) (BBL) by only one order of magnitude (from 4.9 to 51kDa) enables the development of n-type OECTs with record-high geometry-normalized transconductance (gm,norm ≈ 11 S cm-1 ) and electron mobility × volumetric capacitance (µC* ≈ 26 F cm-1 V-1 s-1 ), fast temporal response (0.38ms), and low threshold voltage (0.15V). This enhancement in OECT performance is ascribed to a more efficient intermolecular charge transport in high-molecular-weight BBL than in the low-molecular-weight counterpart. OECT-based complementary inverters are also demonstrated with record-high voltage gains of up to 100V V-1 and ultralow power consumption down to 0.32 nW, depending on the supply voltage. These devices are among the best sub-1 Vcomplementary inverters reported to date. These findings demonstrate the importance of molecular weight in optimizing the OECT performance of rigid organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors and open for a new generation of power-efficient organic (bio-)electronic devices.
Highlights
Organic mixed ionic–electronic conductors (OMIECs) are an emerging material technology for manyelectronic and energy harvesting/storage applications.[1]
We demonstrated organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs)-based complementary inverters with a record-high voltage gain of up to 100 V V−1 and ultralow power consumption down to 0.32 nW, depending on the supply voltage. These devices are among the best performing sub-1 V complementary inverters reported to date. These findings demonstrate the importance of molecular weight to optimize the OECT performance of rigid OMIEC polymers
We have investigated the influence of molecular weight on charge transport properties and OECT performance of
Summary
Organic mixed ionic–electronic conductors (OMIECs) are an emerging material technology for many (opto-)electronic and energy harvesting/storage applications.[1]. N-type (electron-transporting) OMIECs lag far behind in terms of performance with gm,norm < 2 S cm−1 and μC* values of
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