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Dive into the research topics where Jeong-Wan Jo is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeong-Wan Jo.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Highly stable and imperceptible electronics utilizing photoactivated heterogeneous sol-gel metal-oxide dielectrics and semiconductors.

Jeong-Wan Jo; Jaekyun Kim; Kyung-Tae Kim; Jingu Kang; Myung-Gil Kim; Kwang-Ho Kim; Hyungduk Ko; Yong-Hoon Kim; Sung Kyu Park

Incorporation of Zr into an AlOx matrix generates an intrinsically activated ZAO surface enabling the formation of a stable semiconducting IGZO film and good interfacial properties. Photochemically annealed metal-oxide devices and circuits with the optimized sol-gel ZAO dielectric and IGZO semiconductor layers demonstrate the high performance and electrically/mechanically stable operation of flexible electronics fabricated via a low-temperature solution process.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Ultrahigh Detective Heterogeneous Photosensor Arrays with In‐Pixel Signal Boosting Capability for Large‐Area and Skin‐Compatible Electronics

Jaehyun Kim; Jaekyun Kim; Sangho Jo; Jingu Kang; Jeong-Wan Jo; Myungwon Lee; Juhyuk Moon; Lin Yang; Myung-Gil Kim; Yong-Hoon Kim; Sung Kyu Park

An ultra-thin and large-area skin-compatible heterogeneous organic/metal-oxide photosensor array is demonstrated which is capable of sensing and boosting signals with high detectivity and signal-to-noise ratio. For the realization of ultra-flexible and high-sensitive heterogeneous photosensor arrays on a polyimide substrate having organic sensor arrays and metal-oxide boosting circuitry, solution-processing and room-temperature alternating photochemical conversion routes are applied.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Light-induced hysteresis and recovery behaviors in photochemically activated solution-processed metal-oxide thin-film transistors

Jeong-Wan Jo; Yong-Hoon Kim; Sung Kyu Park

In this report, photo-induced hysteresis, threshold voltage (VT) shift, and recovery behaviors in photochemically activated solution-processed indium-gallium-zinc oxide (IGZO) thin-film transistors (TFTs) are investigated. It was observed that a white light illumination caused negative VT shift along with creation of clockwise hysteresis in electrical characteristics which can be attributed to photo-generated doubly ionized oxygen vacancies at the semiconductor/gate dielectric interface. More importantly, the photochemically activated IGZO TFTs showed much reduced overall VT shift compared to thermally annealed TFTs. Reduced number of donor-like interface states creation under light illumination and more facile neutralization of ionized oxygen vacancies by electron capture under positive gate potential are claimed to be the origin of the less VT shift in photochemically activated TFTs.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Water-Mediated Photochemical Treatments for Low-Temperature Passivation of Metal-Oxide Thin-Film Transistors

Jae Sang Heo; Jeong-Wan Jo; Jingu Kang; Chan-Yong Jeong; Hu Young Jeong; Sung Kyu Kim; Kwanpyo Kim; Hyuck-In Kwon; Jaekyun Kim; Yong-Hoon Kim; Myung-Gil Kim; Sung Kyu Park

The low-temperature electrical passivation of an amorphous oxide semiconductor (AOS) thin-film transistor (TFT) is achieved by a deep ultraviolet (DUV) light irradiation-water treatment-DUV irradiation (DWD) method. The water treatment of the first DUV-annealed amorphous indium-gallium-zinc-oxide (a-IGZO) thin film is likely to induce the preferred adsorption of water molecules at the oxygen vacancies and leads to subsequent hydroxide formation in the bulk a-IGZO films. Although the water treatment initially degraded the electrical performance of the a-IGZO TFTs, the second DUV irradiation on the water-treated devices may enable a more complete metal-oxygen-metal lattice formation while maintaining low oxygen vacancies in the oxide films. Overall, the stable and dense metal-oxygen-metal (M-O-M) network formation could be easily achieved at low temperatures (below 150 °C). The successful passivation of structural imperfections in the a-IGZO TFTs, such as hydroxyl group (OH-) and oxygen vacancies, mainly results in the enhanced electrical performances of the DWD-processed a-IGZO TFTs (on/off current ratio of 8.65 × 10(9), subthreshold slope of 0.16 V/decade, an average mobility of >6.94 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), and a bias stability of ΔVTH < 2.5 V), which show more than a 30% improvement over the simple DUV-treated a-IGZO TFTs.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Brain-Inspired Photonic Neuromorphic Devices using Photodynamic Amorphous Oxide Semiconductors and their Persistent Photoconductivity

Minkyung Lee; Woobin Lee; Seungbeom Choi; Jeong-Wan Jo; Jaekyun Kim; Sung Kyu Park; Yong-Hoon Kim

The combination of a neuromorphic architecture and photonic computing may open up a new era for computational systems owing to the possibility of attaining high bandwidths and the low-computation-power requirements. Here, the demonstration of photonic neuromorphic devices based on amorphous oxide semiconductors (AOSs) that mimic major synaptic functions, such as short-term memory/long-term memory, spike-timing-dependent plasticity, and neural facilitation, is reported. The synaptic functions are successfully emulated using the inherent persistent photoconductivity (PPC) characteristic of AOSs. Systematic analysis of the dynamics of photogenerated carriers for various AOSs is carried out to understand the fundamental mechanisms underlying the photoinduced carrier-generation and relaxation behaviors, and to search for a proper channel material for photonic neuromorphic devices. It is found that the activation energy for the neutralization of ionized oxygen vacancies has a significant influence on the photocarrier-generation and time-variant recovery behaviors of AOSs, affecting the PPC behavior.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Low-Temperature Postfunctionalization of Highly Conductive Oxide Thin-Films toward Solution-Based Large-Scale Electronics

Seok-Gyu Ban; Kyungtae Kim; Byung Doo Choi; Jeong-Wan Jo; Yong-Hoon Kim; Antonio Facchetti; Myung-Gil Kim; Sung Kyu Park

Although transparent conducting oxides (TCOs) have played a key role in a wide range of solid-state electronics from conventional optoelectronics to emerging electronic systems, the processing temperature and conductivity of solution-processed materials seem to be far exceeding the thermal limitations of soft materials and insufficient for high-perfomance large-area systems, respectively. Here, we report a strategy to form highly conductive and scalable solution-processed oxide materials and their successful translation into large-area electronic applications, which is enabled by photoassisted postfunctionalization at low temperature. The low-temperature fabrication of indium-tin-oxide (ITO) thin films was achieved by using photoignited combustion synthesis combined with photoassisted reduction process under hydrogen atmosphere. It was noteworthy that the photochemically activated hydrogens on ITO surface could be triggered to facilitate highly crystalline oxygen deficient structure allowing significant increase of carrier concentration and mobility through film microstructure modifications. The low-temperature postfunctionalized ITO films demonstrated conductivity of >1607 S/cm and sheet resistance of <104 Ω/□ under the process temperature of less than 300 °C, which are comparable to those of vacuum-deposited and high-temperature annealed ITO films. Based on the photoassisted postfunctionalization route, all-solution-processed transparent metal-oxide thin-film-transistors and large-area integrated circuits with the ITO bus lines were demonstrated, showing field-effect mobilities of >6.5 cm2 V-1 s-1 with relatively good operational stability and oscillation frequency of more than 1 MHz in 7-stage ring oscillators, respectively.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

High-Mobility and Hysteresis-Free Flexible Oxide Thin-Film Transistors and Circuits by Using Bilayer Sol–Gel Gate Dielectrics

Jeong-Wan Jo; Kwang-Ho Kim; Jaeyoung Kim; Seok Gyu Ban; Yong-Hoon Kim; Sung Kyu Park

In this paper, we demonstrate high-performance and hysteresis-free solution-processed indium-gallium-zinc oxide (IGZO) thin-film transistors (TFTs) and high-frequency-operating seven-stage ring oscillators using a low-temperature photochemically activated Al2O3/ZrO2 bilayer gate dielectric. It was found that the IGZO TFTs with single-layer gate dielectrics such as Al2O3, ZrO2, or sodium-doped Al2O3 exhibited large hysteresis, low field-effect mobility, or unstable device operation owing to the interfacial/bulk trap states, insufficient band offset, or a substantial number of mobile ions present in the gate dielectric layer, respectively. To resolve these issues and to explain the underlying physical mechanisms, a series of electrical analyses for various single- and bilayer gate dielectrics was carried out. It is shown that compared to single-layer gate dielectrics, the Al2O3/ZrO2 gate dielectric exhibited a high dielectric constant of 8.53, low leakage current density (∼10-9 A cm-2 at 1 MV cm-1), and stable operation at high frequencies. Using the photochemically activated Al2O3/ZrO2 gate dielectric, the seven-stage ring oscillators operating at an oscillation frequency of ∼334 kHz with a propagation delay of <216 ns per stage were successfully demonstrated on a polymeric substrate.


Small | 2017

Photochemical Molecular Tailoring for Efficient Diffusion and Reorganization of Organic Nanocrystals for Ultra-Flexible Organic Semiconductor Arrays

Jingu Kang; Jaehyun Kim; Jeong-Wan Jo; Jae Sang Heo; Myung-Gil Kim; Yong-Hoon Kim; Jaekyun Kim; Sung Kyu Park

Solution-processed organic single crystals with high carrier mobility have been actively investigated for diverse applications such as displays, sensors, and next generation electronics on a flexible platform. However, the lack of precise alignment and growth control of organic single crystals impedes the widespread adoption of organic materials in an industrial perspective. Here, a photochemical modification approach is reported tailoring the solubility and molecular diffusivity of polymeric sacrificial layer and sequential batch-type vapor annealing to implement high-performance (average saturation mobility: 8.01 cm2 V-1 s-1 ) organic single-crystal thin film transistors with large channel width including multiple aligned single crystals. Additionally, the mechanical properties of the organic single crystals are systematically investigated with extreme strain conditions such as bending radius of 150 μm.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Ultralow-Temperature Solution-Processed Aluminum Oxide Dielectrics via Local Structure Control of Nanoclusters

Jeong-Wan Jo; Yong-Hoon Kim; Joohyung Park; Jae Sang Heo; Seongpil Hwang; Won-June Lee; Myung-Han Yoon; Myung-Gil Kim; Sung Kyu Park

Oxide dielectric materials play a key role in a wide range of high-performance solid-state electronics from semiconductor devices to emerging wearable and soft bioelectronic devices. Although several previous advances are noteworthy, their typical processing temperature still far exceeds the thermal limitations of soft materials, impeding their wide utilization in these emerging fields. Here, we report an innovative route to form highly reliable aluminum oxide dielectric films using an ultralow-temperature (<60 °C) solution process with a class of oxide nanocluster precursors. The extremely low-temperature synthesis of oxide dielectric films was achieved by using low-impurity, bulky metal-oxo-hydroxy nanoclusters combined with a spatially controllable and highly energetic light activation process. It was noteworthy that the room-temperature light activation process was highly effective in dissociating the metal-oxo-hydroxy clusters, enabling the formation of a dense atomic network at low temperature. The ultralow-temperature solution-processed oxide dielectrics demonstrated high breakdown field (>6 MV cm-1), low leakage (∼1 × 10-8 A cm-2 at 2 MV cm-1), and excellent electrical stability comparable to those of vacuum-deposited and high-temperature-processed dielectric films. For potential applications of the oxide dielectrics, transparent metal oxides and carbon nanotube active devices as well as integrated circuits were implemented directly on both ultrathin polymeric and highly stretchable substrates.


Applied Physics Letters | 2018

Suppression of persistent photo-conductance in solution-processed amorphous oxide thin-film transistors

Minkyung Lee; Minho Kim; Jeong-Wan Jo; Sung Kyu Park; Yong-Hoon Kim

This study offers a combinatorial approach for suppressing the persistent photo-conductance (PPC) characteristic in solution-processed amorphous oxide semiconductor (AOS) thin-film transistors (TFTs) in order to achieve rapid photo-recovery. Various analyses were used to examine the photo-instability of indium-gallium-zinc-oxide (IGZO) TFTs including negative-bias-illumination-stress (NBIS) and transient photo-response behaviors. It was found that the indium ratio in metallic components had a significant impact on their PPC and photo-recovery characteristics. In particular, when the indium ratio was low (51.5%), the PPC characteristic was significantly suppressed and achieving rapid photo-recovery was possible without significantly affecting the electrical performance of AOSs. These results imply that the optimization of the indium composition ratio may allow achieving highly photo-stable and near PPC-free characteristics while maintaining high electrical performance of AOSs. It is considered that the neg...

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Yong-Hoon Kim

Seoul National University

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Jaeyoung Kim

Sungkyunkwan University

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