Transistor Sizing for Bias-Stress Instability Compensation in Inkjet-Printed Organic Complementary Inverters

We present a design approach to maintain a stable voltage transfer characteristic in inkjet-printed complementary organic thin-film transistor logic inverters via device sizing. We use transistor-level design to help achieve stable logic gates, so that performance is less dependent on processing conditions and materials properties that are difficult to control for inkjet-printed electronics. Despite bias-stress instability in the individual p- and n-type transistors, a stable inverter switching threshold is achieved by equalizing the magnitudes of positive and negative threshold voltage shifts. Following a typical sizing approach for complementary logic, a p- to n-transistor transconductance ratio of 0.25 places the inverter switching threshold near the center of the voltage supply range. However, we show through calculations and measured results that a ratio closer to 2.5 prevents rapid shift of the switching threshold, which is equally important for reliable inverter operation. Furthermore, we provide a design approach to size digital logic gates with arbitrary probability of output states.

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