Field Effect Transport and Trapping in Regioregular Polythiophene Nanofibers

We report the electrical characterization of field effect transistors based on regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene) (RRP3HT) nanofibers fabricated using nanostencil shadow masks. Mobility values were 0.02 cm2/Vs with on/off current ratios of 106. Current densities of ∼700 A/cm2 were achieved in singl...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2004-12, Vol.108 (50), p.19169-19179
Hauptverfasser: Merlo, Jeffrey A, Frisbie, C. Daniel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report the electrical characterization of field effect transistors based on regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene) (RRP3HT) nanofibers fabricated using nanostencil shadow masks. Mobility values were 0.02 cm2/Vs with on/off current ratios of 106. Current densities of ∼700 A/cm2 were achieved in single nanofibers. A series of Soxhlet extractions was employed to separate RRP3HT into narrow molecular weight fractions. Nanofibers made from the THF fraction exhibited superior electrical properties in terms of increased current levels and decreased activation energy. The lowest activation energies in the nanofibers were achieved by using top contacts (i.e., vapor-deposited metal on top of the nanofibers) and material purified by Soxhlet extraction. Contact effects were eliminated from bottom contact devices (i.e., nanofibers on top of metal electrodes on a dielectric substrate) with a four-probe geometry. Temperature-dependent measurements reveal two distinct regimes of transport. The high-temperature regime (355−245 K) is characterized by activation energies of 62−145 meV depending on contact geometry and RRP3HT purity with a Meyer−Neldel energy of 33 ± 3 meV. The low-temperature regime (235−85 K) has lower activation energies of 31−112 meV. Shifts in the turn-on gate voltage with temperature indicate ∼4.8 × 1012 acceptor-like states/cm2 (or ∼1 per nm of fiber length) and 3.2 × 1012 donor-like states/cm2 exist in the nanofibers. We propose that transport can be explained in terms of the multiple trap and release (MTR) or variable range hopping (VRH) formalisms of transport in a bimodal, exponential distribution of shallow and deep donor-like states.
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/jp047023a