This application relates to printable electronics.
Printed conductive tracks have found many applications including electrical circuits, sensors, and antennas. The conductive inks used for the printing purpose usually comprise three main components: metal particles/flakes, binders, and solvents (Crumpton 2011; Dorfman 2005; Dorfman 2010). The metal particles/flakes provide the electrical properties required, the binders bind the particles/flakes together and provide the tracks with adequate inherent mechanical properties and the adhesion to the substrate, the solvents are mainly used to make the ink printable.
After printing, the printed tracks go through a drying/curing process as suggested by the ink suppliers in order to remove the solvents. A fast drying/curing process, which is required by production lines, not only requires fairly high temperature, but also leaves a large amount of microstructural voids inside the printed tracks (as illustrated in
In US patent application publication US 2010/0231672 (Joyce 2010), calendering was proposed as a post-curing method to improve the electrical conductivity of the printed tracks. Calendering is a two-roll hot pressing process. After drying/curing, the printed conductive tracks are hot pressed by the calenders. There is one significant drawback of this method, i.e. the temperature claimed is below 110° C. As many binder materials used in the conductive inks have glass transition temperatures (Tg) either around 110° C. or higher, the disclosed calendering process is treating hard materials. This method is not very efficient (as seen from the results presented in the publication) and the method can cause damage to the printed tracks.
A mechanical pressing technique for post-curing of printed conductive tracks has been proposed (Yoshida 2011). This is again a hot pressing technique. In Yoshida 2011, the authors touched the densification and reorientation of the particles in the printed conductive tracks. The pressing technique used a temperature less than 120° C. and a pressure over 100 MPa (14,504 psi). This pressure is too high for high speed industrial manufacturing. In addition, this hot pressing technique takes 30 seconds, which is too long for high throughput production.
There remains a need for a method of improving properties of conductive tracks, which is amenable to high throughput manufacturing processes.
There is provided a process for improving a property of a conductive ink track on a substrate, the method comprising: applying heat and pressure to a conductive ink track deposited on a first surface of a substrate, the conductive ink comprising conductive particles and a binder, the heat providing a temperature above a glass transition temperature of the binder; and, maintaining a second surface of the substrate at a temperature below a glass transition temperature, a melting temperature or a degradation temperature of the substrate while the heat is applied to the conductive ink track on the first surface of the substrate.
There is further provided a printed electronic device produced by the process.
In embodiments, the improvement to the property may be one or more of increased electrical conductivity, increased thermal conductivity, increased strength, or increased bonding performance to external attachments. Increased electrical or thermal conductivity may be viewed as decreased electrical or thermal resistivity, respectively.
The process is particularly useful for producing electronic devices, for example electrical circuits, sensors, antennae (e.g. RFID antennae), touch switches and smart drug packaging on various substrates
Further features will be described or will become apparent in the course of the following detailed description. It should be understood that each feature described herein may be utilized in any combination with any one or more of the other described features, and that each feature does not necessarily rely on the presence of another feature except where evident to one of skill in the art.
For clearer understanding, preferred embodiments will now be described in detail by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Conductive inks are generally known in the art and many suitable inks for use in the present process are commercially available. Conductive inks for printed circuits generally comprise three main components: conductive particles, a binder and a solvent. The conductive particles provide electrical properties, the binder binds the particles together and provides the tracks with adequate mechanical properties and adhesion to the substrate and the solvent is mainly used to make the ink printable. The conductive ink may be provided in any suitable physical form, for example liquids or pastes.
The conductive particles may be any suitable shape, for example flakes, spheres, rods, cones, plates or irregularly-shaped. Flakes are preferred. Flakes are particles where two lateral dimensions are substantially larger (e.g. at least about 10 times larger, preferably about 100 times larger) than a third dimension (i.e. thickness) of the particle. The particles preferably have an average particle size in a range of about 1-100 microns, preferably about 1-50 microns, although particle sizes of less than 1 micron may be used in some products. The particles preferably have a particle size distribution in a range of about 10-50% of the average particle size. Conductive particles may be conductive metals, conductive non-metals or mixtures thereof. Some examples of conductive metal particles include Ag, Au, Cu, Pt, Pd, Ru, Ni, Al, any alloys thereof or any mixture thereof. Some examples of conductive non-metals include carbon particles, carbon nanotubes, graphenes or any mixture thereof. Silver (Ag) is preferred. The conductive particles preferably comprise 30-95 wt % of the ink based on total weight of the ink.
The binder may be any suitable organic or inorganic polymer or resin that is able to bind the conductive particles together and adhere with sufficient strength to the substrate. The binder preferably comprises an organic polymer or resin, for example polyacrylic acid, a polyacrylate, a phenoxy polymer, a urethane polymer, polyethylene imine, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, carboxymethylcellulose, polyvinyl alcohol, a polyester, among others. The binder may comprise homopolymer, copolymer, terpolymer or polymer blends. The solvent is preferably an organic solvent, for example toluene, benzene, methyl propyl ketone, n-propyl acetate, n-butyl acetate, isobutyl acetate, and mixtures thereof. Other additives, for example plasticizers, microbicides, etc. may be included. The non-conductive components of the ink are preferably present in the ink composition in an amount of about 5-70 wt % with the binder generally in a range of about 15-35 wt %.
The substrate may be any suitable substrate for the purpose to which the conductive ink is being put. Substrates include, for example polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polyolefin (e.g. silica-filled polyolefin (Teslin™) polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), polystyrene, polycarbonate, polyimide, textiles (e.g. cellulosic textiles) among others.
Depositing the ink on a substrate may be accomplished by any suitable method, for example, inkjet printing, flexography printing (e.g. stamps), gravure printing, screen printing, off-set printing, airbrushing, typesetting, or any other method. After deposition, the ink may be dried or cured according to standard procedures, for example allowing the ink to dry in ambient conditions or heating the ink for a relatively long period of time (e.g. up to 5 minutes) to evaporate the solvent, before applying the present process. Or, the ink deposited on the substrate may be subjected to the present process immediately after deposition, or the solvents in the ink deposited being partially evaporated and then subjected to the present process.
The present process results in densification of the microstructure of the conductive ink tracks on the first surface of the substrate. The process may also serve to flatten the substrate in comparison to the substrate before the process was performed. A flatter substrate may have a more uniform thickness and may be substantially more planar with fewer bends and/or warps.
To densify the microstructure of conductive ink tracks efficiently, the binders in the inks should be softened (similar to the processing of plastics) while applying pressure. The temperature applied to the conductive ink trace is above a glass transition temperature (Tg) of the binder. The temperature is preferably in a range of about ±30° C. of the melting temperature (Tm) of the binder, i.e. greater than 30° C. below the melting temperature and less than 30° C. above the melting temperature of the binder. The temperature is preferably in a range of about 5-200° C. above the Tg of the binder, more preferably about 25-150° C. above the Tg of the binder, even more preferably about 50-120° C. above the Tg of the binder. The pressure applied to the conductive ink trace is preferably in a range of about 10-2000 psi, more preferably about 100-1000 psi. The heat and pressure are preferably applied for a short period of time, preferably for a duration in a range of about 0.01-5 seconds, for example about 2 seconds. The heat and pressure may be applied in one pulse for a short period of time, or may be applied in two or more pulses each for short time periods of time. Each application of heat and pressure may be at the same or different temperature and/or pressure for the same or different length of time. The time delay between applications of heat and pressure may be sufficient to cool the substrate in preparation for the next pulse of heat and pressure. The delay time is preferably on the same order of magnitude as the pulse time, for example about 0.01-5 seconds. As heat transfer takes time, the use of heat/pressure pulses reduces the possibility of deforming or damaging the substrate.
Most polymer substrates used for printed conductive tracks also soften or degrade in the temperature range of the present process. Therefore, a long time at high temperature and pressure is likely to deform or damage the substrate. This may be why the prior art (Joyce 2010; Yoshida 2011) limited the processing temperature to lower than 120° C. However, polymer materials are poor conductors. Therefore, integrity of the substrate may be maintained if the heat/pressure treatment is done for a short period of time. The exact pulse length (or time) depends on the particular substrate and ink used. In addition, due to the softening of the binder during the process, the pressure required for the densification of the printed tracks can be decreased accordingly. Integrity of the substrate may also be maintained by applying the heat only to the first surface of the substrate on which the conductive trace is deposited. Thus, the temperature at the second surface of the substrate may be maintained below a glass transition temperature, a melting temperature or a degradation temperature of the substrate while the heat is applied to the conductive ink track on the first surface of the substrate. Any suitable method for applying the heat and pressure in this manner may be implemented. Two embodiments are described as follows.
A first approach is to use a flat-bed press as illustrated in
The arrangement illustrated in
Two types of conductive inks are used in this example. One is DuPont 5029 ink, the other is XEROX's XRCC Lab384 ink. Both inks were screen printed on Teslin™ substrates. The printed conductive tracks were heat/pressure treated at a temperature of 170° C. and a pressure of 950 psi for 2 seconds using the flat-bed press method. The SEM pictures of the printed tracks before and after the treatment are shown in
DuPont 5029 was printed on Teslin™ to form RFID antennae having a configuration as shown in
In a first pulsed heat/pressure densification process, loop antennas of design 1 to design 5 were processed on a flat-bed press as depicted in
In a second pulsed heat/pressure densification process, loop antennas were processed on a flat-bed press as depicted in
Direct current (DC) electrical resistance for each of the samples was measured and compared to the DC electrical resistance of the same antennae before the heat/pressure process but after processing using the standard conditions suggested by the ink supplier. The results are shown in Table 2. The results clearly demonstrate the effectiveness of the pulsed heat/pressure process. After the process, there is no visually observable change to the substrates.
The contents of the entirety of each of which are incorporated by this reference.
The novel features will become apparent to those of skill in the art upon examination of the description. It should be understood, however, that the scope of the claims should not be limited by the embodiments, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the wording of the claims and the specification as a whole.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/901,651 filed Nov. 8, 2013, the entire contents of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61901651 | Nov 2013 | US |