A flexible field-effect transistor with a poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) active channel and a ferroelectric poly(vinlyidene fluoride-co-trifluoro ethylene) (PVDF-TrFE) insulator exhibits gate-voltage-controllable multilevel non-volatile memory characteristics with highly reliable data retention and endurance.
B- and N-doped carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with controlled workfunctions were successfully employed as charge trap materials for solution processable, mechanically flexible, multilevel switching resistive memory. B- and N-doping systematically controlled the charge trap level and dispersibility of CNTs in polystyrene matrix. Consequently, doped CNT device demonstrated greatly enhanced nonvolatile memory performance (ON-OFF ratio >10(2), endurance cycle >10(2), retention time >10(5)) compared to undoped CNT device. More significantly, the device employing both B- and N-doped CNTs with different charge trap levels exhibited multilevel resistive switching with a discrete and stable intermediate state. Charge trapping materials with different energy levels offer a novel design scheme for solution processable multilevel memory.
High-performance non-volatile memory that can operate under various mechanical deformations such as bending and folding is in great demand for the future smart wearable and foldable electronics. Here we demonstrate non-volatile solution-processed ferroelectric organic field-effect transistor memories operating in p-and n-type dual mode, with excellent mechanical flexibility. Our devices contain a ferroelectric poly(vinylidene fluoride-cotrifluoroethylene) thin insulator layer and use a quinoidal oligothiophene derivative (QQT(CN)4) as organic semiconductor. Our dual-mode field-effect devices are highly reliable with data retention and endurance of 46,000 s and 100 cycles, respectively, even after 1,000 bending cycles at both extreme bending radii as low as 500 mm and with sharp folding involving inelastic deformation of the device. Nano-indentation and nano scratch studies are performed to characterize the mechanical properties of organic layers and understand the crucial role played by QQT(CN)4 on the mechanical flexibility of our devices.
Polymer ferroelectric‐gate field effect transistors (Fe‐FETs) employing ferroelectric polymer thin films as gate insulators are highly attractive as a next‐generation non‐volatile memory. Furthermore, polymer Fe‐FETs have been recently of interest owing to their capability of storing data in more than 2 states in a single device, that is, they have multi‐level cell (MLC) operation potential for high density data storage. However, among a variety of technological issues of MLC polymer Fe‐FETs, the requirement of high voltage for cell operation is one of the most urgent problems. Here, a low voltage operating MLC polymer Fe‐FET memory with a high dielectric constant (k) ferroelectric polymer insulator is presented. Effective enhancement of capacitance of the ferroelectric gate insulator layer is achieved by a simple binary solution‐blend of a ferroelectric poly(vinylidene fluoride‐co‐trifluoroethylene) (PVDF‐TrFE) (k ≈ 8) with a relaxer high‐k poly(vinylidene‐fluoride–trifluoroethylene–chlorotrifluoroethylene) (PVDF‐TrFE‐CTFE) (k ≈ 18). At optimized conditions, a ferroelectric insulator with a PVDF‐TrFE/PVDF‐TrFE‐CTFE (10/5) blend composition enables the discrete six‐level multi‐state operation of a MLC Fe‐FET at a gate voltage sweep of ±18 V with excellent data retention and endurance of each state of more than 104 s and 120 cycles, respectively.
Enhancing the device performance of organic memory devices while providing high optical transparency and mechanical flexibility requires an optimized combination of functional materials and smart device architecture design. However, it remains a great challenge to realize fully functional transparent and mechanically durable nonvolatile memory because of the limitations of conventional rigid, opaque metal electrodes. Here, we demonstrate ferroelectric nonvolatile memory devices that use graphene electrodes as the epitaxial growth substrate for crystalline poly(vinylidene fluoride-trifluoroethylene) (PVDF-TrFE) polymer. The strong crystallographic interaction between PVDF-TrFE and graphene results in the orientation of the crystals with distinct symmetry, which is favorable for polarization switching upon the electric field. The epitaxial growth of PVDF-TrFE on a graphene layer thus provides excellent ferroelectric performance with high remnant polarization in metal/ferroelectric polymer/metal devices. Furthermore, a fully transparent and flexible array of ferroelectric field effect transistors was successfully realized by adopting transparent poly[bis(4-phenyl)(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)amine] semiconducting polymer.
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