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

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Summary

Introduction

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

Results and Discussion
Conclusions
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