Issue 24, 2015

‘Soft’ amplifier circuits based on field-effect ionic transistors

Abstract

Soft materials can be used as the building blocks for electronic devices with extraordinary properties. We introduce a theoretical model for a field-effect transistor in which ions are the gated species instead of electrons. Our model incorporates readily-available soft materials, such as conductive porous membranes and polymer-electrolytes to represent a device that regulates ion currents and can be integrated as a component in larger circuits. By means of Nernst–Planck numerical simulations as well as an analytical description of the steady-state current we find that the responses of the system to various input voltages can be categorized into ohmic, sub-threshold, and active modes. This is fully analogous to what is known for the electronic field-effect transistor (FET). Pivotal FET properties such as the threshold voltage and the transconductance crucially depend on the half-cell redox potentials of the source and drain electrodes as well as on the polyelectrolyte charge density and the gate material work function. We confirm the analogy with the electronic FETs through numerical simulations of elementary amplifier circuits in which we successfully substitute the electronic transistor by an ionic transistor.

Graphical abstract: ‘Soft’ amplifier circuits based on field-effect ionic transistors

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
09 Mar 2015
Accepted
12 May 2015
First published
13 May 2015

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 4793-4798

Author version available

‘Soft’ amplifier circuits based on field-effect ionic transistors

N. Boon and M. Olvera de la Cruz, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 4793 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM00573F

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