| Literature DB >> 23002806 |
Maxime G Lemaitre1, Evan P Donoghue, Mitchell A McCarthy, Bo Liu, Sefaattin Tongay, Brent Gila, Purushottam Kumar, Rajiv K Singh, Bill R Appleton, Andrew G Rinzler.
Abstract
An improved process for graphene transfer was used to demonstrate high performance graphene enabled vertical organic field effect transistors (G-VFETs). The process reduces disorder and eliminates the polymeric residue that typically plagues transferred films. The method also allows for purposely creating pores in the graphene of a controlled areal density. Transconductance observed in G-VFETs fabricated with a continuous (pore-free) graphene source electrode is attributed to modulation of the contact barrier height between the graphene and organic semiconductor due to a gate field induced Fermi level shift in the low density of electronic-states graphene electrode. Pores introduced in the graphene source electrode are shown to boost the G-VFET performance, which scales with the areal pore density taking advantage of both barrier height lowering and tunnel barrier thinning. Devices with areal pore densities of 20% exhibit on/off ratios and output current densities exceeding 10(6) and 200 mA/cm(2), respectively, at drain voltages below 5 V.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23002806 DOI: 10.1021/nn303848k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881