Suppressing Hydrogen-related Trap States in indium-gallium-zinc oxide thin-film transistors for High-Mobility and Low-Power Oxide Electronicsopen access
- Authors
- Park, Ji-Min; Jang, SeongCheol; Song, Minju; An, Ki-Seok; Kang, Youngho; Kim, Junghwan; Kim, Hyun-Suk
- Issue Date
- Dec-2025
- Publisher
- SPRINGER NATURE
- Citation
- Communications Materials, v.6, no.1
- Indexed
- SCOPUS
ESCI
- Journal Title
- Communications Materials
- Volume
- 6
- Number
- 1
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/62422
- DOI
- 10.1038/s43246-025-01003-x
- ISSN
- 2662-4443
2662-4443
- Abstract
- Controlling defect states and impurity incorporation in oxide semiconductors is crucial for advancing high-performance thin-film transistors. Here we show that hydrogen impurities act predominantly as deep-level electron traps, critically limiting both performance and reliability. Using density functional theory calculations supported by experimental analysis, we demonstrate that suppressing hydrogen incorporation markedly improves device characteristics. Indium-gallium-zinc oxide transistors fabricated under hydrogen-controlled conditions exhibit enhanced bias stability and, with an aluminum electron-injection layer, achieve a high field-effect mobility of about 120 cm(2)/V.s, nearly twice that of devices processed in hydrogen-rich environments. These devices also support high-speed switching up to 1 MHz. When integrated with a negative capacitance structure, they exhibit subthreshold swing values as low as 39 mV/dec, surpassing the thermionic limit. Inverter circuits with hydrogen-suppressed IGZO TFTs with an aluminum electron-injection layer deliver a gain of similar to 50, far exceeding the similar to 10 of conventional counterparts. These findings highlight hydrogen control as a key enabler of low-power, high-speed oxide electronics.
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Collections - College of Engineering > Department of Energy and Materials Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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