Organic electronics: Introduction

For the past forty years inorganic silicon and gallium arsenide semiconductors, silicon dioxide insulators, and metals such as aluminum and copper have been the backbone of the semiconductor industry. However, there has been a growing research effort in “organic electronics” to improve the semiconducting, conducting, and lightemitting properties of organics (polymers, oligomers) and hybrids (organic–inorganic composites) through novel synthesis and self-assembly techniques. Performance improvements, coupled with the ability to process these “active” materials at low temperatures over large areas on materials such as plastic or paper, may provide unique technologies and generate new applications and form factors to address the growing needs for pervasive computing and enhanced connectivity. If we review the growth of the electronics industry, it is clear that innovative organic materials have been essential to the unparalleled performance increase in semiconductors, storage, and displays at the consistently lower costs that we see today. However, the majority of these organic materials are either used as sacrificial stencils (photoresists) or passive insulators and take no active role in the electronic functioning of a device. They do not conduct current to act as switches or wires, and they do not emit light. For semiconductors, two major classes of passive organic materials have made possible the current cost/performance ratio of logic chips: photoresists and insulators. Photoresists are the key materials that define chip circuitry and enable the constant shrinking of device dimensions [1–3]. In the late 1960s, photoresist materials limited the obtainable resolution of the optical tools to ;5.0 mm (;500 transistors/cm). As optical tools continued to improve, owing to unique lens design and light sources, new resists had to be developed to continue lithographic scaling. Chemists created unique photosensitive polymers to satisfy the resolution, sensitivity, and processing needs of each successive chip generation, and now photoresist materials improve the resolution that could normally be provided on an optical exposure tool. The increased resolution capability of photoresists combined with optical tool enhancements has enabled the fabrication of 1.2 million transistors/cm with feature sizes of 180 nm, significantly smaller than the 248-nm exposure wavelength of the current optical exposure tool—an achievement that was not considered possible a few years ago. Polymeric insulators have also been essential to the performance and reliability of semiconductor devices. They were first used in the packaging of semiconductor chips, where low-cost epoxy materials found applications as insulation for wiring in the fabrication of printed wiring boards and as encapsulants to provide support/protection and hence reliability for the chips [4, 5]. Although the first polymeric dielectrics were used in the packaging of chips, IBM recently introduced a polymer that replaces the silicon dioxide dielectric typically used on-chip throughout the industry as an insulator. The seven levels of metal wiring required to connect the millions of transistors on a chip can significantly affect chip performance because of signal propagation delay and crosstalk between wiring. Improvement in interconnect performance requires reduction of the resistance (R) and capacitance (C). IBM was the first to use copper to replace aluminum wiring as a low-resistivity metal, and the first to use a low-k

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