| Literature DB >> 31293012 |
Junzhan Wang1, Satyaprasad P Senanayak1, Jie Liu2, Yuanyuan Hu3, Yanjun Shi2,4, Zelun Li2, Caixin Zhang5, Bingyan Yang1, Longfeng Jiang2, Dawei Di1, Anton V Ievlev6, Olga S Ovchinnikova6, Tao Ding1, Huixiong Deng5, Liming Tang3, Yunlong Guo2,4, Jianpu Wang7, Kai Xiao6, Deepak Venkateshvaran1, Lang Jiang2,4, Daoben Zhu2,4, Henning Sirringhaus1.
Abstract
Optoelectronic devices based on metal halide perovskites, including solar cells and light-emitting diodes, have attracted tremendous research attention globally in the last decade. Due to their potential to achieve high carrier mobilities, organic-inorganic hybrid perovskite materials can enable high-performance, solution-processed field-effect transistors (FETs) for next-generation, low-cost, flexible electronic circuits and displays. However, the performance of perovskite FETs is hampered predominantly by device instabilities, whose origin remains poorly understood. Here, perovskite single-crystal FETs based on methylammonium lead bromide are studied and device instabilities due to electrochemical reactions at the interface between the perovskite and gold source-drain top contacts are investigated. Despite forming the contacts by a gentle, soft lamination method, evidence is found that even at such "ideal" interfaces, a defective, intermixed layer is formed at the interface upon biasing of the device. Using a bottom-contact, bottom-gate architecture, it is shown that it is possible to minimize such a reaction through a chemical modification of the electrodes, and this enables fabrication of perovskite single-crystal FETs with high mobility of up to ≈15 cm2 V-1 s-1 at 80 K. This work addresses one of the key challenges toward the realization of high-performance solution-processed perovskite FETs.Entities:
Keywords: field-effect transistors (FETs); perovskite; single crystals
Year: 2019 PMID: 31293012 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201902618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849