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Unraveling Structure and Device Operation of Organic Permeable Base Transistors

2020, Darbandy, Ghader, Dollinger, Felix, Formánek, Petr, Hübner, René, Resch, Stefan, Roemer, Christian, Fischer, Axel, Leo, Karl, Kloes, Alexander, Kleemann, Hans

Organic permeable base transistors (OPBTs) are of great interest for flexible electronic circuits, as they offer very large on-current density and a record-high transition frequency. They rely on a vertical device architecture with current transport through native pinholes in a central base electrode. This study investigates the impact of pinhole density and pinhole diameter on the DC device performance in OPBTs based on experimental data and TCAD simulation results. A pinhole density of NPin = 54 µm−2 and pinhole diameters around LPin = 15 nm are found in the devices. Simulations show that a variation of pinhole diameter and density around these numbers has only a minor impact on the DC device characteristics. A variation of the pinhole diameter and density by up to 100% lead to a deviation of less than 4% in threshold voltage, on/off current ratio, and sub-threshold slope. Hence, the fabrication of OPBTs with reliable device characteristics is possible regardless of statistical deviations in thin film formation. © 2020 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

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Drift–diffusion simulation of S-shaped current–voltage relations for organic semiconductor devices

2020, Doan, Duy Hai, Fischer, Axel, Fuhrmann, Jürgen, Glitzky, Annegret, Liero, Matthias

We present an electrothermal drift–diffusion model for organic semiconductor devices with Gauss–Fermi statistics and positive temperature feedback for the charge carrier mobilities. We apply temperature-dependent Ohmic contact boundary conditions for the electrostatic potential and discretize the system by a finite volume based generalized Scharfetter–Gummel scheme. Using path-following techniques, we demonstrate that the model exhibits S-shaped current–voltage curves with regions of negative differential resistance, which were only recently observed experimentally. © 2020, The Author(s).

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Drift-diffusion simulation of S-shaped current-voltage relations for organic semiconductor devices

2019, Doan, Duy Hai, Fischer, Axel, Fuhrmann, Jürgen, Glitzky, Annegret, Liero, Matthias

We present an electrothermal drift-diffusion model for organic semiconductor devices with Gauss-Fermi statistics and positive temperature feedback for the charge carrier mobilities. We apply temperature dependent Ohmic contact boundary conditions for the electrostatic potential and discretize the system by a finite volume based generalized Scharfetter-Gummel scheme. Using path-following techniques we demonstrate that the model exhibits S-shaped current-voltage curves with regions of negative differential resistance, which were only recently observed experimentally.

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p-Laplace thermistor modeling of electrothermal feedback in organic semiconductors

2015, Liero, Matthias, Koprucki, Thomas, Fischer, Axel, Scholz, Reinhard, Glitzky, Annegret

In large-area Organic Light-Emitting Diodes (OLEDs) spatially inhomogeneous luminance at high power due to inhomogeneous current flow and electrothermal feedback can be observed. To describe these self-heating effects in organic semiconductors we present a stationary thermistor model based on the heat equation for the temperature coupled to a p-Laplace-type equation for the electrostatic potential with mixed boundary conditions. The p-Laplacian describes the non-Ohmic electrical behavior of the organic material. Moreover, an Arrhenius-like temperature dependency of the electrical conductivity is considered. We introduce a finite-volume scheme for the system and discuss its relation to recent network models for OLEDs. In two spatial dimensions we derive a priori estimates for the temperature and the electrostatic potential and prove the existence of a weak solution by Schauder's fixed point theorem.

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Operation mechanism of high performance organic permeable base transistors with an insulated and perforated base electrode

2016, Kaschura, Felix, Fischer, Axel, Klinger, Markus P., Doan, Duy Hai, Koprucki, Thomas, Glitzky, Annegret, Kasemann, Daniel, Widmer, Johannes, Leo, Karl

The organic permeable base transistor is a vertical transistor architecture that enables high performance while maintaining a simple low-resolution fabrication. It has been argued that the charge transport through the nano-sized openings of the central base electrode limits the performance. Here, we demonstrate by using 3D drift-diffusion simulations that this is not the case in the relevant operation range. At low current densities, the applied base potential controls the number of charges that can pass through an opening and the opening is the current limiting factor. However, at higher current densities, charges accumulate within the openings and in front of the base insulation, allowing for an efficient lateral transport of charges towards the next opening. The on-state in the current-voltage characteristics reaches the maximum possible current given by space charge limited current transport through the intrinsic semiconductor layers. Thus, even a small effective area of the openings can drive huge current densities, and further device optimization has to focus on reducing the intrinsic layer thickness to a minimum.

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Introducing pinMOS Memory: A Novel, Nonvolatile Organic Memory Device

2020, Zheng, Yichu, Fischer, Axel, Sawatzki, Michael, Doan, Duy Hai, Liero, Matthias, Glitzky, Annegret, Reineke, Sebastian, Mannsfeld, Stefan C.B.

In recent decades, organic memory devices have been researched intensely and they can, among other application scenarios, play an important role in the vision of an internet of things. Most studies concentrate on storing charges in electronic traps or nanoparticles while memory types where the information is stored in the local charge up of an integrated capacitance and presented by capacitance received far less attention. Here, a new type of programmable organic capacitive memory called p-i-n-metal-oxide-semiconductor (pinMOS) memory is demonstrated with the possibility to store multiple states. Another attractive property is that this simple, diode-based pinMOS memory can be written as well as read electrically and optically. The pinMOS memory device shows excellent repeatability, an endurance of more than 104 write-read-erase-read cycles, and currently already over 24 h retention time. The working mechanism of the pinMOS memory under dynamic and steady-state operations is investigated to identify further optimization steps. The results reveal that the pinMOS memory principle is promising as a reliable capacitive memory device for future applications in electronic and photonic circuits like in neuromorphic computing or visual memory systems. © 2019 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

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Feel the heat: Nonlinear electrothermal feedback in organic LEDs

2013, Fischer, Axel, Koprucki, Thomas, Gärtner, Klaus, Tietze, Max L., Brückner, Jacqueline, Lüssem, Björn, Leo, Karl, Glitzky, Annegret, Scholz, Reinhard

For lighting applications, Organic light-emitting diodes (OLED) need much higher brightness than for displays, leading to self-heating. Due to the temperature-activated transport in organic semiconductors, this can result in brightness inhomogeneities and catastrophic failure. Here, we show that due to the strong electrothermal feedback of OLEDs, the common spatial current and voltage distribution is completely changed, requiring advanced device modeling and operation concepts. Our study clearly demonstrates the effect of negative differential resistance (NDR) in OLEDs induced by self-heating. As a consequence, for increasing voltage, regions with declining voltages are propagating through the device, and even more interestingly, a part of these regions show even decreasing currents, leading to strong local variation in luminance. The expected breakthrough of OLED lighting technology will require an improved price performance ratio, and the realization of modules with very high brightness but untainted appearance is considered to be an essential step into this direction. Thus, a deeper understanding of the control of electrothermal feedback will help to make OLEDs in lighting more competitive.

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Enhancing sub-bandgap external quantum efficiency by photomultiplication for narrowband organic near-infrared photodetectors

2021, Kublitski, Jonas, Fischer, Axel, Xing, Shen, Baisinger, Lukasz, Bittrich, Eva, Spoltore, Donato, Benduhn, Johannes, Vandewal, Koen, Leo, Karl

Detection of electromagnetic signals for applications such as health, product quality monitoring or astronomy requires highly responsive and wavelength selective devices. Photomultiplication-type organic photodetectors have been shown to achieve high quantum efficiencies mainly in the visible range. Much less research has been focused on realizing near-infrared narrowband devices. Here, we demonstrate fully vacuum-processed narrow- and broadband photomultiplication-type organic photodetectors. Devices are based on enhanced hole injection leading to a maximum external quantum efficiency of almost 2000% at −10 V for the broadband device. The photomultiplicative effect is also observed in the charge-transfer state absorption region. By making use of an optical cavity device architecture, we enhance the charge-transfer response and demonstrate a wavelength tunable narrowband photomultiplication-type organic photodetector with external quantum efficiencies superior to those of pin-devices. The presented concept can further improve the performance of photodetectors based on the absorption of charge-transfer states, which were so far limited by the low external quantum efficiency provided by these devices.

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Electrothermal Tristability Causes Sudden Burn-In Phenomena in Organic LEDs

2021, Kirch, Anton, Fischer, Axel, Liero, Matthias, Fuhrmann, Jürgen, Glitzky, Annegret, Reineke, Sebastian

Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) have been established as a mature display pixel technology. While introducing the same technology in a large-area form factor to general lighting and signage applications, some key questions remain unanswered. Under high-brightness conditions, OLED panels were reported to exhibit nonlinear electrothermal behavior causing lateral brightness inhomogeneities and even regions of switched-back luminance. Also, the physical understanding of sudden device failure and burn-ins is still rudimentary. A safe and stable operation of lighting tiles, therefore, requires an in-depth understanding of these physical phenomena. Here, it is shown that the electrothermal treatment of thin-film devices allows grasping the underlying physics. Configurations of OLEDs with different lateral dimensions are studied as a role model and it is reported that devices exceeding a certain panel size develop three stable, self heating-induced operating branches. Switching between them causes the sudden formation of dark spots in devices without any preexisting inhomogeneities. A current-stabilized operation mode is commonly used in the lighting industry, as it ensures degradation-induced voltage adjustments. Here, it is demonstrated that a tristable operation always leads to destructive switching, independent of applying constant currents or voltages. With this new understanding of the effects at high operation brightness, it will be possible to adjust driving schemes accordingly, design more resilient system integrations, and develop additional failure mitigation strategies. © 2021 The Authors. Advanced Functional Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH

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3D electrothermal simulations of organic LEDs showing negative differential resistance

2017, Liero, Matthias, Fuhrmann, Jürgen, Glitzky, Annegret, Koprucki, Thomas, Fischer, Axel, Reineke, Sebastian

Organic semiconductor devices show a pronounced interplay between temperature-activated conductivity and self-heating which in particular causes inhomogeneities in the brightness of large-area OLEDs at high power. We consider a 3D thermistor model based on partial differential equations for the electrothermal behavior of organic devices and introduce an extension to multiple layers with nonlinear conductivity laws, which also take the diode-like behavior in recombination zones into account. We present a numerical simulation study for a red OLED using a finite-volume approximation of this model. The appearance of S-shaped current-voltage characteristics with regions of negative differential resistance in a measured device can be quantitatively reproduced. Furthermore, this simulation study reveals a propagation of spatial zones of negative differential resistance in the electron and hole transport layers toward the contact.