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Small sized of anion doping effect on semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube network for field-effect transistors

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Abstract
Carbon nanotubes have shown great promise for high-performance, large-area, solution processable field-effect transistors due to their exceptional charge transport properties. In this study, we utilize the spin-coating method to form networks from selectively sorted semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (s-SWNTs), aiming for scalable electronic device fabrication. The one-dimensional nature of s-SWNTs, however, introduces significant roughness and charge trap sites, hindering charge transport due to the van der Waals gap (∼0.32 nm) between nanotubes. Addressing this, we explored the effects of anion doping on the spin-coated s-SWNT random network, with a focus on the influence of the small size of halogen anions (0.13-0.22 nm) on these electronic properties. Raman and ultraviolet-visible-near-infrared optical spectroscopy results indicate that smaller anions significantly enhance doping effects through strong non-covalent anion-π interactions, improving charge transport and carrier injection efficiency in s-SWNTs, especially for n-type operation. This improvement is inversely proportional to the size of the halogen anions, with the smallest anion (fluorine) effectively transitioning the electrical characteristics of the s-SWNT network from ambipolar to n-type by reducing both junction and contact resistances through anion doping, based on anion-π interaction. © 2024 Author(s).
Author(s)
Yang, DongseongMoon, YinaHan, NaraLee, MinwooBeak, JeongwooSong, Geon ChangLee, Seung-HoonKim, Dong-Yu
Issued Date
2024-07
Type
Article
DOI
10.1063/5.0203757
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/9460
Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Citation
Journal of Applied Physics, v.136, no.4
ISSN
0021-8979
Appears in Collections:
Department of Materials Science and Engineering > 1. Journal Articles
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