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Dive into the research topics where Stefan P. Schießl is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan P. Schießl.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Polymer-sorted semiconducting carbon nanotube networks for high-performance ambipolar field-effect transistors.

Stefan P. Schießl; Nils Fröhlich; Martin Held; Florentina Gannott; Manuel Schweiger; Michael Forster; Ullrich Scherf; Jana Zaumseil

Efficient selection of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) from as-grown nanotube samples is crucial for their application as printable and flexible semiconductors in field-effect transistors (FETs). In this study, we use atactic poly(9-dodecyl-9-methyl-fluorene) (a-PF-1-12), a polyfluorene derivative with asymmetric side-chains, for the selective dispersion of semiconducting SWNTs with large diameters (>1 nm) from plasma torch-grown SWNTs. Lowering the molecular weight of the dispersing polymer leads to a significant improvement of selectivity. Combining dense semiconducting SWNT networks deposited from an enriched SWNT dispersion with a polymer/metal-oxide hybrid dielectric enables transistors with balanced ambipolar, contact resistance-corrected mobilities of up to 50 cm2·V–1·s–1, low ohmic contact resistance, steep subthreshold swings (0.12–0.14 V/dec) and high on/off ratios (106) even for short channel lengths (<10 μm). These FETs operate at low voltages (<3 V) and show almost no current hysteresis. The resulting ambipolar complementary-like inverters exhibit gains up to 61.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Polymer/metal oxide hybrid dielectrics for low voltage field-effect transistors with solution-processed, high-mobility semiconductors

Martin Held; Stefan P. Schießl; Dominik Miehler; Florentina Gannott; Jana Zaumseil

Transistors for future flexible organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display backplanes should operate at low voltages and be able to sustain high currents over long times without degradation. Hence, high capacitance dielectrics with low surface trap densities are required that are compatible with solution-processable high-mobility semiconductors. Here, we combine poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and atomic layer deposition hafnium oxide (HfOx) into a bilayer hybrid dielectric for field-effect transistors with a donor-acceptor polymer (DPPT-TT) or single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) as the semiconductor and demonstrate substantially improved device performances for both. The ultra-thin PMMA layer ensures a low density of trap states at the semiconductor-dielectric interface while the metal oxide layer provides high capacitance, low gate leakage and superior barrier properties. Transistors with these thin (≤70 nm), high capacitance (100–300 nF/cm2) hybrid dielectrics enable low operating voltages (<5 V),...


Nano Letters | 2016

Broadband Tunable, Polarization-Selective and Directional Emission of (6,5) Carbon Nanotubes Coupled to Plasmonic Crystals

Yuriy Zakharko; Arko Graf; Stefan P. Schießl; Bernd Hähnlein; Jörg Pezoldt; Malte C. Gather; Jana Zaumseil

We demonstrate broadband tunability of light emission from dense (6,5) single-walled carbon nanotube thin films via efficient coupling to periodic arrays of gold nanodisks that support surface lattice resonances (SLRs). We thus eliminate the need to select single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) with different chiralities to obtain narrow linewidth emission at specific near-infrared wavelengths. Emission from these hybrid films is spectrally narrow (20–40 meV) yet broadly tunable (∼1000–1500 nm) and highly directional (divergence <1.5°). In addition, SLR scattering renders the emission highly polarized, even though the SWNTs are randomly distributed. Numerical simulations are applied to correlate the increased local electric fields around the nanodisks with the observed enhancement of directional emission. The ability to control the emission properties of a single type of near-infrared emitting SWNTs over a wide range of wavelengths will enable application of carbon nanotubes in multifunctional photonic devices.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Understanding Charge Transport in Mixed Networks of Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes.

Marcel Rother; Stefan P. Schießl; Yuriy Zakharko; Florentina Gannott; Jana Zaumseil

The ability to select and enrich semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT) with high purity has led to a fast rise of solution-processed nanotube network field-effect transistors (FETs) with high carrier mobilities and on/off current ratios. However, it remains an open question whether it is best to use a network of only one nanotube species (monochiral) or whether a mix of purely semiconducting nanotubes but with different bandgaps is sufficient for high performance FETs. For a range of different polymer-sorted semiconducting SWNT networks, we demonstrate that a very small amount of narrow bandgap nanotubes within a dense network of large bandgap nanotubes can dominate the transport and thus severely limit on-currents and effective carrier mobility. Using gate-voltage-dependent electroluminescence, we spatially and spectrally reveal preferential charge transport that does not depend on nominal network density but on the energy level distribution within the network and carrier density. On the basis of these results, we outline rational guidelines for the use of mixed SWNT networks to obtain high performance FETs while reducing the cost for purification.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Hybrid modulation-doping of solution-processed ultrathin layers of ZnO using molecular dopants

Stefan P. Schießl; Hendrik Faber; Yen-Hung Lin; Stephan Rossbauer; Qingxiao Wang; Kui Zhao; Aram Amassian; Jana Zaumseil; Thomas D. Anthopoulos

An alternative doping approach that exploits the use of organic donor/acceptor molecules for the effective tuning of the free electron concentration in quasi-2D ZnO transistor channel layers is reported. The method relies on the deposition of molecular dopants/formulations directly onto the ultrathin ZnO channels. Through careful choice of materials combinations, electron transfer from the dopant molecule to ZnO and vice versa is demonstrated.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Extracting the field-effect mobilities of random semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube networks: A critical comparison of methods

Stefan P. Schießl; Marcel Rother; Jan Lüttgens; Jana Zaumseil

The field-effect mobility is an important figure of merit for semiconductors such as random networks of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). However, owing to their network properties and quantum capacitance, the standard models for field-effect transistors cannot be applied without modifications. Several different methods are used to determine the mobility with often very different results. We fabricated and characterized field-effect transistors with different polymer-sorted, semiconducting SWNT network densities ranging from low (≈6 μm−1) to densely packed quasi-monolayers (≈26 μm−1) with a maximum on-conductance of 0.24 μS μm−1 and compared four different techniques to evaluate the field-effect mobility. We demonstrate the limits and requirements for each method with regard to device layout and carrier accumulation. We find that techniques that take into account the measured capacitance on the active device give the most reliable mobility values. Finally, we compare our experimental results to a ra...


ACS Macro Letters | 2012

Effect of Polymer Molecular Weight and Solution Parameters on Selective Dispersion of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

Florian Jakubka; Stefan P. Schießl; Sebastian Martin; Jan M. Englert; Frank Hauke; Andreas Hirsch; Jana Zaumseil


Advanced Functional Materials | 2014

Epitaxial Growth of PbSe Quantum Dots on MoS2 Nanosheets and their Near‐Infrared Photoresponse

Julia Schornbaum; Benjamin Winter; Stefan P. Schießl; Florentina Gannott; Georgios Katsukis; Dirk M. Guldi; Erdmann Spiecker; Jana Zaumseil


Carbon | 2016

Large scale, selective dispersion of long single-walled carbon nanotubes with high photoluminescence quantum yield by shear force mixing

Arko Graf; Yuriy Zakharko; Stefan P. Schießl; Claudia Backes; Moritz Pfohl; Benjamin S. Flavel; Jana Zaumseil


Advanced Materials | 2014

Mapping Charge-Carrier Density Across the p–n Junction in Ambipolar Carbon-Nanotube Networks by Raman Microscopy

Stefan Grimm; Florian Jakubka; Stefan P. Schießl; Florentina Gannott; Jana Zaumseil

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Florentina Gannott

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Arko Graf

Heidelberg University

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Stefan Grimm

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Benjamin Winter

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Erdmann Spiecker

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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