Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting

The fabrication of printed electronic devices via molten metal droplet jetting has enormous potential in flexible electronic device applications due to the extremely high electrical conductivity and excellent substrate adhesion of printed features. However, large pinholes (which could be detrimental...

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Main Authors: Manoj Meda, Viktor Sukhotskiy, Denis Cormier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Electronics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9292/10/13/1568
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spelling doaj-74d03bc929c2413681cb4f5cce9a0f022021-07-15T15:32:32ZengMDPI AGElectronics2079-92922021-06-01101568156810.3390/electronics10131568Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet JettingManoj Meda0Viktor Sukhotskiy1Denis Cormier2Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623, USADepartment of Electrical Engineering, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260, USADepartment of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623, USAThe fabrication of printed electronic devices via molten metal droplet jetting has enormous potential in flexible electronic device applications due to the extremely high electrical conductivity and excellent substrate adhesion of printed features. However, large pinholes (which could be detrimental to the feature performance) have been experimentally observed when molten metal droplets of aluminum 4043 alloy are deposited and solidified on a polyimide (PI) substrate. In this study, we have shown that subjecting the polymer substrate to elevated temperature during droplet deposition considerably reduces the number and size of pinholes. The formation mechanism behind the large pinholes is interpreted as the release of the adsorbed/absorbed moisture from the polymer substrate into the solidifying droplet due to the rapid rise in temperature of the substrate upon droplet impact. Through numerical modelling, we have shown that the temperature of the polyimide substrate underneath the deposited droplet exceeds the boiling point of water while the metal droplet is still in liquid state, showing the possibility of water vapor escaping from the substrate and causing pinholes in the solidifying metal.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9292/10/13/1568printed electronicsdroplet jettingpinhole
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manoj Meda
Viktor Sukhotskiy
Denis Cormier
spellingShingle Manoj Meda
Viktor Sukhotskiy
Denis Cormier
Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting
Electronics
printed electronics
droplet jetting
pinhole
author_facet Manoj Meda
Viktor Sukhotskiy
Denis Cormier
author_sort Manoj Meda
title Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting
title_short Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting
title_full Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting
title_fullStr Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting
title_full_unstemmed Pinhole Formation in Printed Electronic Traces Fabricated via Molten Metal Droplet Jetting
title_sort pinhole formation in printed electronic traces fabricated via molten metal droplet jetting
publisher MDPI AG
series Electronics
issn 2079-9292
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The fabrication of printed electronic devices via molten metal droplet jetting has enormous potential in flexible electronic device applications due to the extremely high electrical conductivity and excellent substrate adhesion of printed features. However, large pinholes (which could be detrimental to the feature performance) have been experimentally observed when molten metal droplets of aluminum 4043 alloy are deposited and solidified on a polyimide (PI) substrate. In this study, we have shown that subjecting the polymer substrate to elevated temperature during droplet deposition considerably reduces the number and size of pinholes. The formation mechanism behind the large pinholes is interpreted as the release of the adsorbed/absorbed moisture from the polymer substrate into the solidifying droplet due to the rapid rise in temperature of the substrate upon droplet impact. Through numerical modelling, we have shown that the temperature of the polyimide substrate underneath the deposited droplet exceeds the boiling point of water while the metal droplet is still in liquid state, showing the possibility of water vapor escaping from the substrate and causing pinholes in the solidifying metal.
topic printed electronics
droplet jetting
pinhole
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9292/10/13/1568
work_keys_str_mv AT manojmeda pinholeformationinprintedelectronictracesfabricatedviamoltenmetaldropletjetting
AT viktorsukhotskiy pinholeformationinprintedelectronictracesfabricatedviamoltenmetaldropletjetting
AT deniscormier pinholeformationinprintedelectronictracesfabricatedviamoltenmetaldropletjetting
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