Vertical organic transistors are a promising candidate to overcome the scaling limits of conventional horizontal organic field-effect devices. In this paper, based on the results of direct current (dc) and low-frequency noise (LFN) measurements, we propose a picture for the carrier transport in metal-base organic transistors in which transmission across the base is due to the combined action of both hot-carriers (HCs) and high-conduction paths (pores) in themetal base. Investigateddevicesemploy pentacene and copper phthalocyanine as active layers for the emitter and collector regions, and a bilayer consisting of Au/MoO3 as injecting electrode. The dc analysis highlights that the charge transport in the investigated devices is due to drift diffusion of the emitter-injected carriers in the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) band and is dominated by HC injection, although conduction via pores increases and becomes not negligible at high base-emitter fields. The LFN analysis highlights the presence of two dominant and uncorrelated 1/f current noise sources, one located between base and emitter, due to the fluctuations of the not-transmittedHCcurrent, and a second source located between collector and emitter, due to the fluctuations of the transmitted HC current and/or to the fluctuations of the current through the pores in the metallic base.
Investigation on the conduction mechanisms in metal-base vertical organic transistors by DC and LF-noise measurements
Sarnelli E;Barra M;Cassinese A;
2017
Abstract
Vertical organic transistors are a promising candidate to overcome the scaling limits of conventional horizontal organic field-effect devices. In this paper, based on the results of direct current (dc) and low-frequency noise (LFN) measurements, we propose a picture for the carrier transport in metal-base organic transistors in which transmission across the base is due to the combined action of both hot-carriers (HCs) and high-conduction paths (pores) in themetal base. Investigateddevicesemploy pentacene and copper phthalocyanine as active layers for the emitter and collector regions, and a bilayer consisting of Au/MoO3 as injecting electrode. The dc analysis highlights that the charge transport in the investigated devices is due to drift diffusion of the emitter-injected carriers in the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) band and is dominated by HC injection, although conduction via pores increases and becomes not negligible at high base-emitter fields. The LFN analysis highlights the presence of two dominant and uncorrelated 1/f current noise sources, one located between base and emitter, due to the fluctuations of the not-transmittedHCcurrent, and a second source located between collector and emitter, due to the fluctuations of the transmitted HC current and/or to the fluctuations of the current through the pores in the metallic base.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.