Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors

abstract: A low temperature amorphous oxide thin film transistor (TFT) and amorphous silicon PIN diode backplane technology for large area flexible digital x-ray detectors has been developed to create 7.9-in. diagonal backplanes. The critical steps in the evolution of the backplane process include t...

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Other Authors: Marrs, Michael A (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
TFT
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.37039
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-37039
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-370392018-06-22T03:06:57Z Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors abstract: A low temperature amorphous oxide thin film transistor (TFT) and amorphous silicon PIN diode backplane technology for large area flexible digital x-ray detectors has been developed to create 7.9-in. diagonal backplanes. The critical steps in the evolution of the backplane process include the qualification and optimization of the low temperature (200 °C) metal oxide TFT and a-Si PIN photodiode process, the stability of the devices under forward and reverse bias stress, the transfer of the process to flexible plastic substrates, and the fabrication and assembly of the flexible detectors. Mixed oxide semiconductor TFTs on flexible plastic substrates suffer from performance and stability issues related to the maximum processing temperature limitation of the polymer. A novel device architecture based upon a dual active layer improves both the performance and stability. Devices are directly fabricated below 200 ºC on a polyethylene naphthalate (PEN) substrate using mixed metal oxides of either zinc indium oxide (ZIO) or indium gallium zinc oxide (IGZO) as the active semiconductor. The dual active layer architecture allows for adjustment to the saturation mobility and threshold voltage stability without the requirement of high temperature annealing, which is not compatible with flexible plastic substrates like PEN. The device performance and stability is strongly dependent upon the composition of the mixed metal oxide; this dependency provides a simple route to improving the threshold voltage stability and drive performance. By switching from a single to a dual active layer, the saturation mobility increases from 1.2 cm2/V-s to 18.0 cm2/V-s, while the rate of the threshold voltage shift decreases by an order of magnitude. This approach could assist in enabling the production of devices on flexible substrates using amorphous oxide semiconductors. Low temperature (200°C) processed amorphous silicon photodiodes were developed successfully by balancing the tradeoffs between low temperature and low stress (less than -70 MPa compressive) and device performance. Devices with a dark current of less than 1.0 pA/mm2 and a quantum efficiency of 68% have been demonstrated. Alternative processing techniques, such as pixelating the PIN diode and using organic photodiodes have also been explored for applications where extreme flexibility is desired. Dissertation/Thesis Marrs, Michael A (Author) Raupp, Gregory B (Advisor) Allee, David R (Committee member) Dai, Lenore L (Committee member) Forzani, Erica S (Committee member) Bawolek, Edward J (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemical engineering Materials Science Electrical engineering display electronics flexible oxide TFT x-ray eng 199 pages Doctoral Dissertation Chemical Engineering 2016 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.37039 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical engineering
Materials Science
Electrical engineering
display
electronics
flexible
oxide
TFT
x-ray
spellingShingle Chemical engineering
Materials Science
Electrical engineering
display
electronics
flexible
oxide
TFT
x-ray
Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors
description abstract: A low temperature amorphous oxide thin film transistor (TFT) and amorphous silicon PIN diode backplane technology for large area flexible digital x-ray detectors has been developed to create 7.9-in. diagonal backplanes. The critical steps in the evolution of the backplane process include the qualification and optimization of the low temperature (200 °C) metal oxide TFT and a-Si PIN photodiode process, the stability of the devices under forward and reverse bias stress, the transfer of the process to flexible plastic substrates, and the fabrication and assembly of the flexible detectors. Mixed oxide semiconductor TFTs on flexible plastic substrates suffer from performance and stability issues related to the maximum processing temperature limitation of the polymer. A novel device architecture based upon a dual active layer improves both the performance and stability. Devices are directly fabricated below 200 ºC on a polyethylene naphthalate (PEN) substrate using mixed metal oxides of either zinc indium oxide (ZIO) or indium gallium zinc oxide (IGZO) as the active semiconductor. The dual active layer architecture allows for adjustment to the saturation mobility and threshold voltage stability without the requirement of high temperature annealing, which is not compatible with flexible plastic substrates like PEN. The device performance and stability is strongly dependent upon the composition of the mixed metal oxide; this dependency provides a simple route to improving the threshold voltage stability and drive performance. By switching from a single to a dual active layer, the saturation mobility increases from 1.2 cm2/V-s to 18.0 cm2/V-s, while the rate of the threshold voltage shift decreases by an order of magnitude. This approach could assist in enabling the production of devices on flexible substrates using amorphous oxide semiconductors. Low temperature (200°C) processed amorphous silicon photodiodes were developed successfully by balancing the tradeoffs between low temperature and low stress (less than -70 MPa compressive) and device performance. Devices with a dark current of less than 1.0 pA/mm2 and a quantum efficiency of 68% have been demonstrated. Alternative processing techniques, such as pixelating the PIN diode and using organic photodiodes have also been explored for applications where extreme flexibility is desired. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Chemical Engineering 2016
author2 Marrs, Michael A (Author)
author_facet Marrs, Michael A (Author)
title Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors
title_short Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors
title_full Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors
title_fullStr Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors
title_full_unstemmed Flexible Electronics Powered by Mixed Metal Oxide Thin Film Transistors
title_sort flexible electronics powered by mixed metal oxide thin film transistors
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.37039
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