Enhanced charge trapping effect in PVA/PbI2 synaptic transistors achieved through integrated UV irradiation and thermal annealing treatments
Abstract
Charge-trapping synaptic transistors, owing to their excellent non-volatility, controllable channel conductance, and switching performance, have garnered widespread attention as promising candidates for neuromorphic devices. In this study, the underlying PVA film can smooth the surface of the PbI2 film, thus decreasing its surface roughness and alleviating the charge trapping phenomenon at the PbI2/IGZO heterojunction. The PVA/PbI2 charge-trapping synaptic transistors exhibit progressively enhanced charge-trapping capacity with increasing PbI2 thickness, attributed to the elevated concentration of iodine vacancies (VI) within the PbI2 layer. Moreover, the synergistic combination of UV irradiation and thermal annealing can significantly enhance the charge trapping capability of PVA/PbI2 synaptic transistors because it induces the decomposition of PbI2 and the formation of PbO, thus modulating the concentration of VI. At a lower UV irradiation intensity of 87.5 mW cm−2, the hysteresis window of the devices initially increases, then decreases with increasing temperature. In contrast, when the UV irradiation intensity is elevated to 122.5 mW cm−2, the hysteresis window shows a monotonic decrease with increasing temperature. When the UV irradiation intensity was maintained at 87.5 mW cm−2 and the thermal annealing temperature at 150 °C, the device demonstrated a substantial hysteresis window of 8.56 ± 0.34 V (VG: −10–10 V). Finally, the PVA/PbI2 charge-trapping synaptic transistor manifested typical synaptic characteristics. The image recognition accuracy reached as high as 90.1% after 40 training epochs. This suggests that PVA/PbI2 synaptic transistors hold considerable promise in the fields of neuromorphic computing and artificial intelligence (AI).