4.6 Article

Nanocrystalline cellulose applied simultaneously as the gate dielectric and the substrate in flexible field effect transistors

Journal

NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0957-4484/25/9/094008

Keywords

nanopaper; paper electronics; paper transistor; nanocellulose

Funding

  1. European Commission [228144, CP-IP 246334-2, FP7-NMP-2010-SME/262782-2]
  2. Portuguese Science Foundation (FCT-MEC) [PEst-C/CTM/LA0025/2013-14, EXCL/CTM-NAN/0201/2012, PTDC/CTM/103465/2008, PTDC/CTM-POL/1484/2012, SFRH/BPD/78430/2011]
  3. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PTDC/CTM/103465/2008, PTDC/CTM-POL/1484/2012] Funding Source: FCT

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Cotton-based nanocrystalline cellulose (NCC), also known as nanopaper, one of the major sources of renewable materials, is a promising substrate and component for producing low cost fully recyclable flexible paper electronic devices and systems due to its properties (lightweight, stiffness, non-toxicity, transparency, low thermal expansion, gas impermeability and improved mechanical properties). Here, we have demonstrated for the first time a thin transparent nanopaper-based field effect transistor (FET) where NCC is simultaneously used as the substrate and as the gate dielectric layer in an 'interstrate' structure, since the device is built on both sides of the NCC films; while the active channel layer is based on oxide amorphous semiconductors, the gate electrode is based on a transparent conductive oxide. Such hybrid FETs present excellent operating characteristics such as high channel saturation mobility (>7 cm(2) V-1 s(-1)), drain-source current on/off modulation ratio higher than 10(5), enhancement n-type operation and subthreshold gate voltage swing of 2.11 V/decade. The NCC film FET characteristics have been measured in air ambient conditions and present good stability, after two weeks of being processed, without any type of encapsulation or passivation layer. The results obtained are comparable to ones produced for conventional cellulose paper, marking this out as a promising approach for attaining high-performance disposable electronics such as paper displays, smart labels, smart packaging, RFID (radio-frequency identification) and point-of-care systems for self-analysis in bioscience applications, among others.

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