High-gain, low-voltage unipolar logic circuits based on nanoscale flexible organic thin-film transistors with small signal delays | Science Advances
Abstract
One of the circuit topologies for the implementation of unipolar integrated circuits (circuits that use either p-channel or n-channel transistors, but not both) is the zero-
V
GS
architecture. Zero-
V
GS
circuits often provide excellent static performance (large small-signal gain and large noise margins), but they suffer from the large signal delay imposed by the load transistor. To address this limitation, we have used electron-beam lithography to fabricate zero-
V
GS
circuits based on organic transistors with channel lengths as small as 120 nm on flexible polymeric substrates. For a supply voltage of 3 V, these circuits have characteristic signal-delay time constants of 14 ns for the low-to-high transition and 560 ns for the high-to-low transition of the circuit’s output voltage. These signal delays represent the best dynamic performance reported to date for organic transistor–based zero-
V
GS
circuits. The signal-delay time constant of 14 ns is also the smallest signal delay reported to date for flexible organic transistors.