Abstract

We report a low-cost, mask-free, reduced material wastage, deposited technology using transparent, directly printable, air-stable semiconductor slurries and dielectric solutions. We have demonstrate an emerging process for fabricating printable transistors with ZnO nanoparticles as the active channel and poly(4-vinylphenol) (PVP) matrix as the gate dielectric, respectively, and the inkjet-printed ZnO TFTs have shown to exhibit the carrier mobility of 0.69 cm2/Vs and the threshold voltage of 25.5 V. We suggest that the printable materials and the printing technology enable the use of all-printed low-cost flexible displays and other transparent electronic applications.

1. Introduction

Solution-processable organic semiconductors such as pentacene, poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT), and α,ω-dihexyl-quaterthiophene (DH4T) have been also investigated, but they exhibits low mobility (<0.1 cm2/Vs) and poor stability against humidity [13] in common processes. For these reasons, solution-processed inorganic materials that are stable in air and suitable for solution processes have attracted recent research interest.

Metal oxides are well-known high carrier mobility, and transparent conducting materials as SnO2, In2O3, ZnO [4], and other mixed oxide of Ga, In or Sn, and Zn as amorphous semiconductors, such as IGO, ZTO, IZO, and IGZO [59]. They usually reveal n-type property by virtue of oxygen vacancies or incorporation and also can achieve high mobility of 1–100 cm2/Vs in amorphous state [5, 10], much higher than a-Si (≦1 cm2/Vs). These materials can be deposited by vacuum or soluble thin-film techniques.

Until now, ZnO is still considered an ideal candidate for realizing new transparent and flexible electronics for flat panel display, such as transparent thin-film transistors (TTFTs). Compared with organic TFTs, these oxide TTFTs clearly have more potential for OLED since the mobility is higher and the soluble fabrication is less equivalent to a-Si and simple than LTPS process, which results in higher drive currents, low cost, resolution raising, and uniform large-area fabrication [5]. Zinc oxide films have been studied and fabricated as the active channel of TTFTs using vacuum or soluble processing, such as sputtering, pulsed laser deposition (PLD), chemical vapor deposition (CVD), atomic layer deposition (ALD), spin coating, spray, chemical bath deposition (CBD), and several printing techniques [1117]. An important advantage of ZnO is one oxide that can be crystallized at relatively low temperature, which indicates that the solution processes are introduced into the high-quality film production in place of lithographically defined deposition on plastic substrates for flexible displays. However, TFT devices based on polycrystalline ZnO as active layer by various processes have been reported with mobilities of about 0.2–3 cm2/Vs [1821].

Recently, Inkjet printing (IJP) technology has been used as a low-cost research appliance in laboratory environment, depositing various experimental soluble materials of printing electronics as semiconductors, dielectrics, or conducting constructions of devices, such as the of OTFT, LED, solar cell, metalize, memory, and sensors [22]. IJP is part of noncontact, wide material applications and mask-free deposited technology. The advantage of directly printed property by IJP can achieve multilayer films with various functional inks in one device, simply process and rapidly revise print patterns via controlling digital design for patternable. Other attractive advantages of inkjet-printed electronic include low cost, reducing material waste, and fabrications of large area for roll to roll.

The aim of this work is to prepare and disperse ZnO NPs solutions in high boiling point solvent by dispersants for the inkjet-printed active layer of TFTs. The printed inks were prepared using Poly(4-vinylphenol) (PVP) and zinc acetate dehydrate, which were used for the gate dielectric and semiconductor films of TFTs as precursors, respectively. The thin films of TFTs were deposited on ITO/glass substrates by inkjet printing at low temperature.

2. Experimental

2.1. Preparations of the Semiconductor and the Dielectric Materials

In this work, two types of device were fabricated and shown in Figure 1. The polymer dielectric layers were formed in a metal-insulator-metal (MIM) structure and top-contact TFT device. The cross-linked PVP (Mw~25,000, from Aldrich) and cross-linking reagent poly(melamine-co-formaldehyde) methylated (PMCF, Mw = 511, from Aldrich) dissolved uniformly in propylene glycol monomethyl ether acetate (PGMEA) were selected as the polymer matrix for the soluble dielectric.

According to a previous literature by Baoquan [23], ZnO nanoparticles (NPs) were synthesized by mixing a methanol solution (mol ratio, KOH : Zn(Ac)2 = 1.6 : 1.0), comprising 29.58 mL of 0.31 M potassium hydroxide, 53.98 mL of 0.11 M Zinc acetate, and 320 uL of water, then heating and magnetic stirring at 60°C for 5 h to acquire an opaque suspension.

The transparent part of the staying solution was taken away after 30 min and 30 mL of methanol is readded into the solution then stirring for 5 min twice. The suspension after washings to 16.9 mL in the second washing then stands for 12 h. To well control the solid concentration of ZnO in the suspension from 3.92 to 3.0 wt%, we used 2.8 mL of the suspension to calculate the requirement of the solvent (methanol) and readded about 2.78 g.

Finally, the suspension was mixed with 16.2 mL of PGMEA (V : V, 50 : 50), then 14 mg of the polyester dispersant (4.0% wt. for ZnO-NPs) and 0.26 mL of n-butylamine (0.8% vol.) were dissolved in the mixture to obtain a clear solution, which was used to disperse the ZnO nanoparticles. We utilize another higher boiling point solvent as the second matrix in order both to prevent the jetting nozzle from clogging and to inhibit convective flow in evaporation process. The NPs solid content of ZnO inks is 3 and 7 wt%. To investigate the relation between characterizations of ZnO-NPs film and the composite of suspensions, we prepare ZnO-NPs suspensions and ZnO-NPs/Zn2+ mixture, which were possessed at the concentration of 3 wt%.

2.2. Fabrication of Devices

Bottom-gate, top-contact TFTs were fabricated on a glass substrates and shown in Figure 1. 100 nm thick indium tin oxide (ITO) layer was thermally deposited as a gate electrode on the glass substrate. After cleaning the glass with acetone in an ultrasonic bath, the polymer solution as gate dielectrics on ITO glass substrates was prepared by inkjet printing with a thickness of 1-2 um, from the filtered (0.45 um PTFE filter) compound slurry and then baked at 190°C for 30 min. To obtain the leakage current density and dielectric constant, gold was thermally evaporated through the shadow mask and used as cover electrodes of the MIM structure.

To comparison, as the electrodes for Hall measurement, Mo was deposited onto the spin-cast films of ZnO-NPs and ZnO-NPs/Zn2+ (S.C. = 3 wt%) on PVP layer and postannealed at 200°C for 1 h in air ambient or reducing atmosphere (RA).

To fabricate top-contact TFT structure, ZnO-NPs (3 and 7 wt %) filtered through a 0.45 um PTFE filter (Advantec MFS), is inkjet printed as an inorganic semiconductor layer on ITO/glass substrates with 1.2 um thick PVP, and its thickness was about 2 um. The resulting films are dried at 180°C for 2 hr to evaporate the solvent and annealed at 200°C for 1 h in reducing atmosphere for achieving thermal decomposition of organic residues, metal salts, and the carboxylate anion. Finally, the gold source/drain electrodes are thermally evaporated through the shadow mask on top of the ZnO-NPs layer on PVP/glass, which has the ratio of channel width (𝑊) and length (𝐿) are 2.

The printer constituted a drop-on-demand (DOD) piezoelectric inkjet nozzle (with a drop volume of 1–10 pL) produced by Dimatix (DMP-2800) is used in this work. The print head with 16 nozzles at 254 μm spacing in single row is mounted onto a computer-controlled three-axis gantry system exhibiting a movement accuracy of ±25 um. Stably droplet ejecting is accomplished by applying an 11.5 us long 17 V pulse at a frequency of 1 kHz. The drop spacing was regulated at about 5 um during printing, and layer counts were 3 (and 20 V, 1 kHz, and 10 um of drop spacing).

2.3. Measurements

For spin coating and inkjet printing, a vacuum sintering furnace, filled air, or reducing atmosphere was used to anneal the ZnO NPs film. The thicknesses of the films were measured by an Alpha-Step Profilometer. A Hall measurement was performed to characterize the carrier concentration and Hall mobility of spin-coated ZnO-NPs films on PVP/glass substrates by annealing in various atmospheres. To obtain the optical absorption properties of inkjet-printed ZnO-NPs films, the spectra were measured using a double beam UV-VIS-NIR spectrophotometer (Jasco V-670). Phase transformation and crystallization were measured using high resolution X-ray diffraction (X PETPRO MRD, Phillips). The current-voltage (𝐼-𝑉) characteristics of MIM were measured by an HP 4156A semiconductor parameter analyzer. The capacitance measurements were conducted with an HP 4284A Precision LCR meter. All the measurements were carried out at room temperature in the dark. The surface microstructures of ZnO film on the dielectrics were characterized using a scanning electron microscope (SEM, XL-40FEG, Philips).

3. Results and Discussion

A sedimentation test was supplied by the ZnO-NPs suspensions with the added amines of 0 and 5.2-vol%, whose result after 0 hr and 2 weeks is presented in Figures 2(a) and 2(b), respectively. While the butylamine dissolve in the solution, the rapid changes to transparent and remains with added-butylamine of 3 wt%. It was observed that the suspension without butylamine have been precipitated obviously and the ink sample containing the amines remains stable.

3.1. Morphological Properties

Figures 3 and 4 show the optical microscope and scanning electron micrograph of the ZnO thin film on a PVP/ITO/glass substrate, respectively. It was observed that hexagonal particles were closely packed on the substrate. The hexagonal particles seem to grow from the surface of the substrate. The pole formation may occurr due to the rapid evaporation rate of the solvent by the low boiling temperature or the viscosity excessively low to aggregate the ZnO NPs film with possibly high fluidity. In organic slurry, in order to disperse uniformly nanoparticles, the smaller molecular and shorter chain dispersants such as amines, phosphate esters, fatty acids, or carboxyl acids are used [23, 24]. In certain literature, increasing solid phase in the coating solution could decrease the shrinkage and pole for growth of smooth films [25]. Nevertheless, we obtained the different result and Figure 5 illustrated dispersants with lower boiling point such as butylamine in Marangoni flow mechanism [26]. Butylamine [23] as a ligand with a shorter chain and a low boiling point (78°C) can instead of the comprise acetate (CH3COO) ligand groups chelating with zinc atoms on the surface of ZnO nanocrystals to help achieve high-concentration dispersions of the suspension, hence the residual groups can be removed readily. In particular, butylamine in the higher solid phase content of the ZnO-NPs suspension evaporated faster than other solvent to the nanoparticles aggregated due to the high surface energy during drying, which may results in crack, split and unsmooth by non-uniform deposition and stress after annealing.

3.2. Structural Properties

The properties of the ZnO thin films fabricated by inkjet-printing under the appropriate conditions are examined. Figures 6(a)–6(d) show the X-ray diffraction spectrum of the ZnO nanoparticle powder, spin-cast film, and inkjet-printed film. In Figure 6(a) of X-ray diffraction spectrum, the peaks at 2𝜃 = 31.72, 34.36, 36.18, 47.44, and 56.5°, corresponding to the lattice planes (100), (002), (101), (102), and (110), respectively, of the hexagonal phase of ZnO [27], were present. The XRD pattern indicates that the longer heating condensation time could enhance the orientation of (101) phase, which anticipate enhancing the crystallinity of the ZnO-NPs layer for the performance of these devices. The peak at 2𝜃 = 36.04°, which corresponds to the diffraction from the (101) plane, and the stronger crystalline quality were attributed to Zn2+ in the mixture as shown in Figures 6(b) and 6(c). The patterns also exhibited that the spin-cast ZnO/Zn2+ film formed on PVP dielectric by annealing in RA at low temperature of 200°C had polycrystalline property in evident, which probably scatters or trap the carriers of transport.

The crystallite size of ZnO nanoparticles with increase in synthesis time was calculated using Scherrer’s formula from Cullity (1970):𝐷=0.9𝜆𝐵cos𝜃,(1) where 𝜆, 𝜃, and 𝐵 are the X-ray wavelength (1.54056 Å), Bragg’s angle, and the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the peak. It was found that the average sizes of ZnO particles in 2.5 and 5.0 hr are 9.7 and 13.06 nm, respectively. The sizes of crystallites corresponding to major diffracting plan are summarized in Table 1. We remark that the crystallites are smaller on the surface of the PVP film, except ZnO-NPs annealed in RA (3 vol%), which demonstrates the lager grain size with decreasing the amount of grain boundary.

3.3. Optical Properties

Figure 7 shows the optical transmittance spectrum of the entire IJP-ZnO film (excluding other layers of device or substrate), which exhibits the energy gap of ~3.35 eV. The transmittance pattern in visible part of the spectrum (400–700 nm) is around 60–70%, while the printed film with the lower concentration of the suspension.

3.4. Electrical Properties

The current density-voltage characteristic of inkjet-printed PVP dielectric is shown in Figure 8. The insets in Figure 8 show an optical image and profiler measurement result of the inkjet-printed PVP layer. We obtained that the IJP film possesses a leakage current less than 10−8 A/cm2 under bias of 100 V applied. Nevertheless, taking into account the insulator thickness excluding the gate contact, the dielectric strength of the IJP-film was calculated about 0.83 MV/cm. The stronger strength with thick layer can resist the device work, but induced carriers in the active channel of a transistor in “on” mode decreas due to the weak polarity. We also calculated the dielectric constant of 4.17 at 1 kHz by the C-V characteristic analyzed.

The ZnO-NPs deposited on glass and PVP/glass by annealing at low temperature of 200°C and exhibited Hall effect mobilities of the latter samples in RA exceeding 8 cm2/Vs are shown in Figures 9(a) and 9(b), which have electric potential indeed with an order of magnitude larger than those of amorphous silicon for flexible electronics. A postannealing step at 200°C in an H2 + N2 (3 vol%) atmosphere was performed to improve the electrical performance of the other transistors for the measurement.

Finally, we implemented successfully the printer using a well-dispersed ZnO-NPs suspension to fabricate the active layer and gate dielectric of a top-contact TFT (TC-TFT) at low temperature. Figure 10 shows the transfer and output characteristic of ZnO-NPs-based TFTs fabricated using inkjet-printed active channel and gate dielectric. The 𝐼D-𝑉D curve of the ZnO-based TFT device was measured for the output drain current as the drain voltage (𝑉D) was swept from 0–60 V at gate voltage of 0–50 V in 10 V increments. The 𝐼D-𝑉D ZnO-based TC-TFT shows a typical electrical behavior, pinch-off, and current saturation. It also was observed that the device turns off with zero gate bias indicating that the ZnO-NPs TFT operate in accumulation mode. The field effect mobility (μ) is calculated from the saturation regime of the transfer characteristics with the the following relationship for the continuous thin film [28]: 𝜇=𝐿𝑔𝑚𝑊𝐶ox𝑉DS,(2) where 𝐿, 𝑊, and 𝐶ox indicate the channel length, channel width, and dielectric capacitance, respectively. The off-current, current on/off ratio, saturation field mobility, and threshold voltage calculated are 1.2 × 10−8 A, ~4 × 101 0.69 cm2/Vs, and 25.5 V, respectively. The ZnO-NPs-based TC-TFT has identical saturation field mobility and off-current. However, the mobility is still lower than those published ZnO-TFTs. The on-current did not rise effectively may be attributing to the ZnO-NPs film quality, poor polarity by thick PVP, or interface characteristics of heterolayers. Raising the sheet resistance and excess defect formation due to the rapider evaporation of butylamine in the suspension from the film surface result in adjacent NPs as-aggregated each during the drying process, which made the on-current decline. In Figure 4, we observed films printed with low-concentration suspension reducing the defect such as crack and split. Nevertheless, the inkjet-printed ZnO-NPs-based TFT device is suitable for flat plate display, which would be applied further.

4. Conclusions

In conclusion, we have made good use of sol-gel method to prepare ZnO NPs ink, introduce soluble polymer, and fabricated directly printable gate dielectric films and active channel layers for TFTs using inkjet printing. For printing with mask-free process of semiconductor, preparing the NP inks by dispersant and butylamine, the nano-ZnO particles in the suspension were well dispersed to transparent and more stable effectively for more than 2 weeks then micronozzle jets successfully. Furthermore, in this work, we successfully utilize inkjet printing process to fabricate the active and insulator layers of TFT devices. It is expected that it is possible to implement the low-cost nanoparticles materials and high-performance devices using a simple solution-based fabrication processes.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the National Science Council (NSC), Taiwan, under Contract no. NSC99-2221-E-006-089.