Abstract

The modification of printed silver electrode surfaces for use as the bottom-contact electrodes of organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) is reported. Printed silver electrodes fabricated using the surface photoreactive nanometal printing (SuPR-NaP) technique are inevitably covered with an inert surface layer of alkylamines that is originally used for encapsulation of the silver nanoparticles (AgNPs). However, it may act as a built-in protective layer against carrier injections. We demonstrate that a simple vapor exposure method is sufficient for converting the protective layer into a layer that assists carrier injection. As modifiers, we used various types of fluorinated benzenethiols that exhibit a stronger coordination with the silver surfaces than the alkylamimes. We detected the chemical conversion from alkylamine encapsulation to thiol coordination by surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) and evaluated the improvement in the carrier injection using a transfer length method (TLM) for the OTFTs. Among the modifiers, the pentafluorobenzenethiol (PFBT) treatment significantly improves the device performance and stability of the OTFTs.

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