Langmuir, Vol.34, No.12, 3686-3693, 2018
Switchable Hydrogel-Gated Organic Field-Effect Transistors
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels represent a class of materials capable of reversibly switching their morphological and physicochemical characteristics. An ultrathin poly(acrylic acid) film (ca. 6 nm) grafted onto the gate of a p-type EGOFET is studied, and the correlation between the swelling state of the hydrogel and the transistor output characteristics is presented. The hydrogel-related swelling process occurring in basic medium causes an increase in threshold voltage due to the abrupt and intense increase of the negative charge density on the gate electrode. The variation of the drain current during the in situ modification of the pH electrolyte allows a quantitative analysis of the hydrogel switching kinetics. This work shows not only the relevance of EGOFET as an analytical tool in the broad sense, i.e., able to follow in real time phase transition processes of stimuli responsive materials, but also the relevance of using a hydrogel for field-effect based (bio)detection according to the ability of such material to overcome the well-known Debye length problematics.