Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1528610 | Materials Science and Engineering: B | 2015 | 6 Pages |
•PS:PCBM-based organic non-volatile memory devices was fabricated using spray printing.•The thickness of the film was controlled by adjusting the concentration of the PS:PCBM solutions.•The roughness of spray-printed films was poorer than that of the spin-coated film.•The minimum thickness of the printed film influenced the memory behavior more than the surface roughness.•The spray printed PS:PCBM showed excellent unipolar switching, reliability, retention, and endurance characteristics.
We fabricated polystyrene (PS) and 6-phenyl-C61 butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) based organic non-volatile memory devices using a spray printing technique. Due to the distinct operational properties of this technique, significant differences were observed in the macro- and microscopic features (e.g., the film quality and surface roughness) of the devices. The thickness of the film was successfully controlled by adjusting the concentration of the PS:PCBM solutions sprayed. Although the roughness of the spray-printed films was poorer than that of the spin-coated film, negligible differences were observed in the basic memory characteristics (e.g., the operation voltage range, turn on and off voltage, retention and endurance). In particular, the printing-based organic memory devices were successfully switched, as exhibited by the on/off ratio greater than two orders of magnitude at 0.3 V read voltage. The resistance state of all of the devices was maintained for more than 104 s, indicating their non-volatile characteristics.