A Single n-type Semiconducting Polymer-Based Photo-Electrochemical Transistor
Victor Druet, David Ohayon, Christopher E. Petoukhoff, Yizhou Zhong,, Nisreen Alshehri, Anil Koklu, Prem D. Nayak, Luca Salvigni, Latifah Almulla,, Jokubas Surgailis, Sophie Griggs, Iain McCulloch, Fr\'ed\'eric Laquai, and, Sahika Inal

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel n-type photo-electrochemical transistor made from a single semiconducting polymer film that modulates its conductivity with light, enabling applications in biomedical sensing and light-controlled devices.
Contribution
It presents the first fully reversible, light-controlled organic bioelectronic circuit using a single polymer film without redox reactions, advancing soft electronics and biointerfaces.
Findings
High signal-to-noise ratio in micron-scale device
Sensitive to low light intensities
Demonstrated biomedical applications like photoplethysmogram and artificial synapse
Abstract
Conjugated polymer films that can conduct ionic and electronic charges are central to building soft electronic sensors and actuators. Despite the possible interplay between light absorption and mixed conductivity of these materials in aqueous biological media, no polymer film has ever been used to realize a solar-switchable organic bioelectronic circuit relying on a fully reversible, redox reaction-free mechanism. Here we show that light absorbed by an electron and cation-transporting polymer film reversibly modulates its electrochemical potential and conductivity in an aqueous electrolyte, leveraged to design an n-type photo-electrochemical transistor (n-OPECT). We generate transistor output characteristics by solely varying the intensity of light that hits the n-type polymeric gate electrode, emulating the gate voltage-controlled modulation of the polymeric channel current. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsConducting polymers and applications · Analytical Chemistry and Sensors · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing
