4.6 Article

Rhodamine 6G and phloxine B as photosensitizers for inkjet-printed indium oxide phototransistors

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C
Volume 10, Issue 40, Pages 15126-15136

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2tc02054h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Academy of Finland project FLEXRAD [328627]
  2. Business Finland co-innovation project RaPtor [6030/31/2018]
  3. Academy of Finland (AKA) [328627, 328627] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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In this study, a composite photosensitizing material consisting of organic dyes (rhodamine 6G or phloxine B) encapsulated in In2O3 semiconductor was fabricated using inkjet printing. This composite material enhanced the optoelectronic performance of inkjet-printed In2O3 thin film transistors under green light illumination. The approach presented in this work has the potential to be used in the production of large area optoelectronics for various applications such as displays, photo-memory, or dosimetry.
Indium oxide (In2O3) can be employed as an active semiconductor component in phototransistor devices. However, the large bandgap of In2O3 restricts its wavelength detection range to blue or UV light. Therefore, methods are required to facilitate detection of longer wavelengths. To this end, this work demonstrates the encapsulation of rhodamine 6G or phloxine B organic dye within a matrix of In2O3 semiconductor, to form a composite photosensitizing material that is patterned by the scalable fabrication pathway of inkjet-printing. This composite material is found to enhance the optoelectronic performance of inkjet-printed In2O3 thin film transistors in response to green light (565 nm). Specifically, the devices containing a rhodamine 6G/InOx composite top layer present good electrical performance in the dark with saturation mobility of 6.36 cm(2) V-1 s(-1) and, under green light illumination, photosensitivity of 4.1 x 10(5), and responsivity of 250 A W-1. Its photoconductive state is returned to the initial condition by applied positive gate voltage pulse. The approach presented in this work could be applied for production of large area optoelectronics to enable applications such as displays, photo-memory, or dosimetry.

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