Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features
abstract: Reactive inkjet printing (RIJP) is a direct-write deposition technique that synthesizes and patterns functional materials simultaneously. It is a route to cheap fabrication of highly conductive features on a versatile range of substrates. Silver reactive inks have become a staple of conduc...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-537082019-05-16T03:01:40Z Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features abstract: Reactive inkjet printing (RIJP) is a direct-write deposition technique that synthesizes and patterns functional materials simultaneously. It is a route to cheap fabrication of highly conductive features on a versatile range of substrates. Silver reactive inks have become a staple of conductive inkjet printing for application in printed and flexible electronics, photovoltaic metallization, and more. However, the high cost of silver makes these less effective for disposable and low-cost applications. This work aimed to develop a particle-free formulation for a nickel reactive ink capable of metallizing highly pure nickel at temperatures under 100 °C to facilitate printing on substrates like paper or plastic. Nickel offers a significantly cheaper alternative to silver at slightly reduced bulk conductivity. To meet these aims, three archetypes of inks were formulated. First were a set of glycerol-based inks temperature ink containing nickel acetate, hydrazine, and ammonia in a mixture of water and glycerol. This ink reduced between 115 – 200 °C to produce slightly oxidized deposits of nickel with carbon content around 10 wt %. The high temperature was addressed in a second series, which replaced glycerol with lower boiling glycols and added sodium hydroxide as a strong base to enhance thermodynamics and kinetics of reduction. These inks reduced between 60 and 100 °C but sodium salts contaminated the final deposits. In a third set of inks, sodium hydroxide was replaced with tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH), a strong organic base, to address contamination. These inks also reduced between 60 and 100 °C. Pipetting or printing onto gold coated substrates produce metallic flakes coated in a clear, thick residue. EDS measured carbon and oxygen content up to 70 wt % of deposits. The residue was hypothesized to be a non-volatile byproduct of TMAH and acetate. Recommendations are provided to address the residue. Ultimately the formulated reactive inks did not meet design targets. However, this thesis sets the framework to design an optimal nickel reactive ink in future work. Dissertation/Thesis Debruin, Dylan Jerome (Author) Torres, Cesar (Advisor) Rykaczewski, Konrad (Advisor) Hildreth, Owen (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemical engineering Materials Science Conductive Metal Inks Nickel Reactive Inks Reactive Inkjet Printing eng 100 pages Masters Thesis Chemical Engineering 2019 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53708 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019 |
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NDLTD |
language |
English |
format |
Dissertation |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Chemical engineering Materials Science Conductive Metal Inks Nickel Reactive Inks Reactive Inkjet Printing |
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Chemical engineering Materials Science Conductive Metal Inks Nickel Reactive Inks Reactive Inkjet Printing Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features |
description |
abstract: Reactive inkjet printing (RIJP) is a direct-write deposition technique that synthesizes and patterns functional materials simultaneously. It is a route to cheap fabrication of highly conductive features on a versatile range of substrates. Silver reactive inks have become a staple of conductive inkjet printing for application in printed and flexible electronics, photovoltaic metallization, and more. However, the high cost of silver makes these less effective for disposable and low-cost applications.
This work aimed to develop a particle-free formulation for a nickel reactive ink capable of metallizing highly pure nickel at temperatures under 100 °C to facilitate printing on substrates like paper or plastic. Nickel offers a significantly cheaper alternative to silver at slightly reduced bulk conductivity.
To meet these aims, three archetypes of inks were formulated. First were a set of glycerol-based inks temperature ink containing nickel acetate, hydrazine, and ammonia in a mixture of water and glycerol. This ink reduced between 115 – 200 °C to produce slightly oxidized deposits of nickel with carbon content around 10 wt %.
The high temperature was addressed in a second series, which replaced glycerol with lower boiling glycols and added sodium hydroxide as a strong base to enhance thermodynamics and kinetics of reduction. These inks reduced between 60 and 100 °C but sodium salts contaminated the final deposits.
In a third set of inks, sodium hydroxide was replaced with tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH), a strong organic base, to address contamination. These inks also reduced between 60 and 100 °C. Pipetting or printing onto gold coated substrates produce metallic flakes coated in a clear, thick residue. EDS measured carbon and oxygen content up to 70 wt % of deposits. The residue was hypothesized to be a non-volatile byproduct of TMAH and acetate.
Recommendations are provided to address the residue. Ultimately the formulated reactive inks did not meet design targets. However, this thesis sets the framework to design an optimal nickel reactive ink in future work. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Chemical Engineering 2019 |
author2 |
Debruin, Dylan Jerome (Author) |
author_facet |
Debruin, Dylan Jerome (Author) |
title |
Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features |
title_short |
Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features |
title_full |
Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features |
title_fullStr |
Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features |
title_full_unstemmed |
Formulating a Particle-Free and Low Temperature Nickel Reactive Ink for Inkjet Printing Conductive Features |
title_sort |
formulating a particle-free and low temperature nickel reactive ink for inkjet printing conductive features |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53708 |
_version_ |
1719184107995398144 |