A high carrier-mobility crystalline silicon film directly grown on polyimide using SiCl4/H2 microwave plasma for flexible thin film transistors†
Abstract
An approach for the direct synthesis of crystalline Si films with high carrier mobility on a flexible polyimide (PI) substrate is reported. Microwave plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition was applied using H2-diluted silicon tetrachloride (SiCl4) as a precursor. Dense crystalline Si films with a columnar structure were directly obtained on an unheated substrate without the extra recrystallization technique and the transfer process under an optimal H2 flow rate of 100 sccm. The films show a crystalline volume fraction of >98% and a high growth rate of 4.1 nm s−1. Detailed TEM studies show that crystalline Si films can be directly grown on a substrate without an amorphous incubation layer even at the initial stage. Moreover, a thin layer of a single-crystalline (111) grain exists on the topmost surface. Such a microstructure feature is responsible for the measured high Hall carrier mobility of 170 cm2 V−1 s−1. The adhesion between the Si film and the PI substrate achieves the highest rank, 5B. Mechanical static bending tests reveal the critical radius of curvature (Rc) at 8.0 mm. The decrease in electrical conductivity is only 23% after dynamic bending tests at Rc for 1000 cycles. Top-gate flexible Si thin film transistors employing an optimized 100 nm crystalline Si channel layer exhibit a field-effect carrier mobility as high as 106 cm2 V−1 s−1, a threshold voltage of 2.5 V, and an on/off current ratio of 1.2 × 106. No obvious deterioration of transfer characteristics was observed when the devices were subjected to bending at Rc. These results thus represent important steps toward a low-cost approach to high-performance flexible crystalline Si film based electronics.