| Literature DB >> 27877850 |
Beatrice Fraboni1, Alessandra Scidà1, Piero Cosseddu2, Yongqiang Wang3, Michael Nastasi4, Silvia Milita5, Annalisa Bonfiglio2.
Abstract
We report on the effects of low energy ion implantation on thin films of pentacene, carried out to investigate the efficacy of this process in the fabrication of organic electronic devices. Two different ions, Ne and N, have been implanted and compared, to assess the effects of different reactivity within the hydrocarbon matrix. Strong modification of the electrical conductivity, stable in time, is observed following ion implantation. This effect is significantly larger for N implants (up to six orders of magnitude), which are shown to introduce stable charged species within the hydrocarbon matrix, not only damage as is the case for Ne implants. Fully operational pentacene thin film transistors have also been implanted and we show how a controlled N ion implantation process can induce stable modifications in the threshold voltage, without affecting the device performance.Entities:
Keywords: ion implantation; organic thin film; thin film transistor
Year: 2015 PMID: 27877850 PMCID: PMC5069994 DOI: 10.1088/1468-6996/16/6/065008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.Estimated penetration depth of Ne and N ions, as a function of the implant energy and fluence, evaluated in terms of displacements cm−2 by the Monte Carlo SRIM code.
Figure 2.Effects of the N+ ion implantation process carried out with different fluences with a beam energy of 25 keV on the pentacene film evaluated by FTIR [19] (a), XRR (b) and XRD (c).
Figure 3.AFM images of pentacene thin films: (a) unimplanted and (b) N+ implanted (dose 1 × 1017 ions cm−2 and energy 55 keV).
Figure 4.Electrical resistivity of pentacene thin films implanted with different energies and fluences (a) and its evolution in time (b).
Figure 5.Optical absorption spectra of pentacene thin films as-deposited and after ion implantation with N ions (1016 ions cm−2 at 25 keV). The inset shows the Tauc plot relative to the implanted sample spectrum.
Figure 6.(a) Threshold voltage shift (Vt–Vt0) measured in thin film transistors implanted with different energy and fluence. (b) Mobility variation (μ/μ0) as a function of implant energy and fluence.