| Literature DB >> 34990058 |
Kalaivanan Loganathan1, Alberto D Scaccabarozzi1, Hendrik Faber1, Federico Ferrari1, Zhanibek Bizak2, Emre Yengel1, Dipti R Naphade1, Murali Gedda1, Qiao He3, Olga Solomeshch4, Begimai Adilbekova1, Emre Yarali1, Leonidas Tsetseris5, Khaled N Salama2, Martin Heeney3, Nir Tessler4, Thomas D Anthopoulos1.
Abstract
The low carrier mobility of organic semiconductors and the high parasitic resistance and capacitance often encountered in conventional organic Schottky diodes hinder their deployment in emerging radio frequency (RF) electronics. Here, these limitations are overcome by combining self-aligned asymmetric nanogap electrodes (≈25 nm) produced by adhesion lithography, with a high mobility organic semiconductor, and RF Schottky diodes able to operate in the 5G frequency spectrum are demonstrated. C16 IDT-BT is used, as the high hole mobility polymer, and the impact of p-doping on the diode performance is studied. Pristine C16 IDT-BT-based diodes exhibit maximum intrinsic and extrinsic cutoff frequencies (fC ) of >100 and 6 GHz, respectively. This extraordinary performance is attributed to the planar nature of the nanogap channel and the diode's small junction capacitance (<2 pF). Doping of C16 IDT-BT with the molecular p-dopant C60 F48 improves the diode's performance further by reducing the series resistance resulting to intrinsic and extrinsic fC of >100 and ≈14 GHz respectively, while the DC output voltage of an RF rectifier circuit increases by a tenfold. Our work highlights the importance of the planar nanogap architecture and paves the way for the use of organic Schottky diodes in large-area RF electronics of the future.Entities:
Keywords: Schottky diodes; organic semiconductor; printed electronics; radio frequency electronics; rectifier circuits
Year: 2022 PMID: 34990058 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202108524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849