Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes

Abstract Additively printed circuits provide advantages in reduced waste, rapid prototyping, and versatile flexible substrate choices relative to conventional circuit printing. Copper (Cu) based inks along with intense pulsed light (IPL) sintering can be used in additive circuit printing. However, I...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yong-Rae Jang, Robin Jeong, Hak-Sung Kim, Simon S. Park
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94024-8
id doaj-f9f14a64d4e14069869aff6231e29e4e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f9f14a64d4e14069869aff6231e29e4e2021-07-18T11:27:06ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-07-0111111510.1038/s41598-021-94024-8Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodesYong-Rae Jang0Robin Jeong1Hak-Sung Kim2Simon S. Park3Department of Mechanical Engineering, Hanyang UniversityDepartment of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, Schulich School of Engineering, University of CalgaryDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Hanyang UniversityDepartment of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, Schulich School of Engineering, University of CalgaryAbstract Additively printed circuits provide advantages in reduced waste, rapid prototyping, and versatile flexible substrate choices relative to conventional circuit printing. Copper (Cu) based inks along with intense pulsed light (IPL) sintering can be used in additive circuit printing. However, IPL sintered Cu typically suffer from poor solderability due to high roughness and porosity. To address this, hybrid Cu ink which consists of Cu precursor/nanoparticle was formulated to seed Cu species and fill voids in the sintered structure. Nickel (Ni) electroplating was utilized to further improve surface solderability. Simulations were performed at various electroplating conditions and Cu cathode surface roughness using the multi-physics finite element method. By utilizing a mask during IPL sintering, conductivity was induced in exposed regions; this was utilized to achieve selective Ni-electroplating. Surface morphology and cross section analysis of the electrodes were observed through scanning electron microscopy and a 3D optical profilometer. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analysis was conducted to investigate changes in surface compositions. ASTM D3359 adhesion testing was performed to examine the adhesion between the electrode and substrate. Solder-electrode shear tests were investigated with a tensile tester to observe the shear strength between solder and electrodes. By utilizing Cu precursors and novel multifaceted approach of IPL sintering, a robust and solderable Ni electroplated conductive Cu printed electrode was achieved.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94024-8
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yong-Rae Jang
Robin Jeong
Hak-Sung Kim
Simon S. Park
spellingShingle Yong-Rae Jang
Robin Jeong
Hak-Sung Kim
Simon S. Park
Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
Scientific Reports
author_facet Yong-Rae Jang
Robin Jeong
Hak-Sung Kim
Simon S. Park
author_sort Yong-Rae Jang
title Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
title_short Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
title_full Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
title_fullStr Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
title_full_unstemmed Fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
title_sort fabrication of solderable intense pulsed light sintered hybrid copper for flexible conductive electrodes
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Additively printed circuits provide advantages in reduced waste, rapid prototyping, and versatile flexible substrate choices relative to conventional circuit printing. Copper (Cu) based inks along with intense pulsed light (IPL) sintering can be used in additive circuit printing. However, IPL sintered Cu typically suffer from poor solderability due to high roughness and porosity. To address this, hybrid Cu ink which consists of Cu precursor/nanoparticle was formulated to seed Cu species and fill voids in the sintered structure. Nickel (Ni) electroplating was utilized to further improve surface solderability. Simulations were performed at various electroplating conditions and Cu cathode surface roughness using the multi-physics finite element method. By utilizing a mask during IPL sintering, conductivity was induced in exposed regions; this was utilized to achieve selective Ni-electroplating. Surface morphology and cross section analysis of the electrodes were observed through scanning electron microscopy and a 3D optical profilometer. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analysis was conducted to investigate changes in surface compositions. ASTM D3359 adhesion testing was performed to examine the adhesion between the electrode and substrate. Solder-electrode shear tests were investigated with a tensile tester to observe the shear strength between solder and electrodes. By utilizing Cu precursors and novel multifaceted approach of IPL sintering, a robust and solderable Ni electroplated conductive Cu printed electrode was achieved.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94024-8
work_keys_str_mv AT yongraejang fabricationofsolderableintensepulsedlightsinteredhybridcopperforflexibleconductiveelectrodes
AT robinjeong fabricationofsolderableintensepulsedlightsinteredhybridcopperforflexibleconductiveelectrodes
AT haksungkim fabricationofsolderableintensepulsedlightsinteredhybridcopperforflexibleconductiveelectrodes
AT simonspark fabricationofsolderableintensepulsedlightsinteredhybridcopperforflexibleconductiveelectrodes
_version_ 1721296185000460288