James B. Hannon, Hongsik Park, et al.
BCTM 2014
This study unveils a new tetracene derivative that forms dense, upright monolayers on the surface of aluminum oxide. These monolayers spontaneously self-organize into the active layer in nanoscale field-effect transistor devices when aluminum oxide is used as the dielectric layer. This method gives high yields of working devices that have source-drain distances that are less than 60 nm, thereby providing a method to electrically probe the monolayer assemblies formed from ∼10 zeptomoles of material (approximately 104 molecules). Moreover, this study delineates a new avenue for research in thin-film organic transistors where the active molecules are linked to the dielectric surface to form a monolayer transistor. Copyright © 2004 American Chemical Society.
James B. Hannon, Hongsik Park, et al.
BCTM 2014
Amal Kasry, Ali A. Afzali, et al.
Chemistry of Materials
Kuan-Chang Chiu, Abram L. Falk, et al.
Nano Letters
Zhaoying Hu, Jose Miguel M. Lobez Comeras, et al.
Nature Nanotechnology