Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components

Abstract This study illustrates an innovative way to fabricate inkjet-printed tracks by sequential printing of Zn nanoparticle ink and curing ink for low temperature in situ chemical sintering. Employing chemical curing in place of standard sintering methods leads to the advantages of using flexible...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Subimal Majee, Mikael C. F. Karlsson, Anurak Sawatdee, Mohammad Yusuf Mulla, Naveed ul Hassan Alvi, Valerio Beni, David Nilsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:npj Flexible Electronics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41528-021-00111-1
id doaj-3ce6ee117e96409fb5033b13a0e0b065
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3ce6ee117e96409fb5033b13a0e0b0652021-07-11T11:52:22ZengNature Publishing Groupnpj Flexible Electronics2397-46212021-07-01511810.1038/s41528-021-00111-1Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic componentsSubimal Majee0Mikael C. F. Karlsson1Anurak Sawatdee2Mohammad Yusuf Mulla3Naveed ul Hassan Alvi4Valerio Beni5David Nilsson6RISE Research Institutes of SwedenRISE Research Institutes of SwedenRISE Research Institutes of SwedenRISE Research Institutes of SwedenRISE Research Institutes of SwedenRISE Research Institutes of SwedenRISE Research Institutes of SwedenAbstract This study illustrates an innovative way to fabricate inkjet-printed tracks by sequential printing of Zn nanoparticle ink and curing ink for low temperature in situ chemical sintering. Employing chemical curing in place of standard sintering methods leads to the advantages of using flexible substrates that may not withstand the high thermal budgets of the standard methods. A general formulation engineering method is adopted to produce highly concentrated Zn ink which is cured by inkjet printing an over-layer of aqueous acetic acid which is the curing agent. The experimental results reveal that a narrow window of acid concentration of curing ink plays a crucial role in determining the electrical properties of the printed Zn nanoparticles. Highly conductive (~105 S m−1) and mechanically flexible printed Zn features are achieved. In addition, from systematic material characterization, we obtain an understanding of the curing mechanism. Finally, a touch sensor circuit is demonstrated involving all-Zn printed conductive tracks.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41528-021-00111-1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Subimal Majee
Mikael C. F. Karlsson
Anurak Sawatdee
Mohammad Yusuf Mulla
Naveed ul Hassan Alvi
Valerio Beni
David Nilsson
spellingShingle Subimal Majee
Mikael C. F. Karlsson
Anurak Sawatdee
Mohammad Yusuf Mulla
Naveed ul Hassan Alvi
Valerio Beni
David Nilsson
Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
npj Flexible Electronics
author_facet Subimal Majee
Mikael C. F. Karlsson
Anurak Sawatdee
Mohammad Yusuf Mulla
Naveed ul Hassan Alvi
Valerio Beni
David Nilsson
author_sort Subimal Majee
title Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
title_short Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
title_full Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
title_fullStr Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
title_full_unstemmed Low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed Zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
title_sort low temperature chemical sintering of inkjet-printed zn nanoparticles for highly conductive flexible electronic components
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series npj Flexible Electronics
issn 2397-4621
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract This study illustrates an innovative way to fabricate inkjet-printed tracks by sequential printing of Zn nanoparticle ink and curing ink for low temperature in situ chemical sintering. Employing chemical curing in place of standard sintering methods leads to the advantages of using flexible substrates that may not withstand the high thermal budgets of the standard methods. A general formulation engineering method is adopted to produce highly concentrated Zn ink which is cured by inkjet printing an over-layer of aqueous acetic acid which is the curing agent. The experimental results reveal that a narrow window of acid concentration of curing ink plays a crucial role in determining the electrical properties of the printed Zn nanoparticles. Highly conductive (~105 S m−1) and mechanically flexible printed Zn features are achieved. In addition, from systematic material characterization, we obtain an understanding of the curing mechanism. Finally, a touch sensor circuit is demonstrated involving all-Zn printed conductive tracks.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41528-021-00111-1
work_keys_str_mv AT subimalmajee lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
AT mikaelcfkarlsson lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
AT anuraksawatdee lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
AT mohammadyusufmulla lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
AT naveedulhassanalvi lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
AT valeriobeni lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
AT davidnilsson lowtemperaturechemicalsinteringofinkjetprintedznnanoparticlesforhighlyconductiveflexibleelectroniccomponents
_version_ 1721308550641221632