The present invention is directed to a shear-thinning gel composition for producing a dry, water-stable and electronically conductive ink, comprising (a) dispersed electrically conductive graphite flake particles and (b) at least one further type of electronically conductive particles selected from carbon black and conductive pyrolyzed plant carbon components in a specific ratio of (a) to (b), as well as (c) a dissolved binder based on or consisting of shellac dissolved in a suitable solvent, wherein the ratio of the total of the electrically conductive particles (a)+(b) and the dissolved binder (c), and the weight proportion of the electrically conductive particles in the composition are specified.
The invention further relates to the dried and electronically conductive inks, methods for producing the gel compositions and the use of these gel compositions for preparing, optionally ink-jet printing or robocasting 2D or 3D print products, in particular for preparing electronic devices, such as, for example, flexible electronic devices, biosensors, logic and memory devices, supercapacitors, batteries, flexible batteries, capacitive sensors, RFID tags, and smart packaging.
The development of internet-of-things (IoT) electronics for applications such as wearable technologies and smart packaging leads to a massive increase of low cost electronic products with short lifespan and an exponentially growing amount of electronic waste. Recycling this new class of electronics is particularly challenging due to the wide variety of components and their low economic value.
Disposable electronics are attractive in this field. The development of new materials and new manufacturing techniques is of crucial importance for this new era of electronics. Thus far, the range of available materials and manufacturing processes for disposable electronics is limited. Metals such as e.g. zinc, magnesium and iron have been used as biodegradable electrical conductors, electrodes or current collectors for electronics. The processing of these metals requires expensive and time-consuming cleanroom processes such as e.g. sputtering, photolithography and reactive ion etching or post-processing such as photo curing steps or chemical sintering. These standard microelectronic manufacturing processes suffer from geometrical limitations (due to the planar stacking technology) and limited manufacturing areas (due to the use of vacuum chambers). Carbon-based materials can provide a cleanroom-free alternative for developing electrodes and current collectors but compared to metals they are lower in electrical conductivity. Electrically conductive carbon-polymer composites can be processed with alternative manufacturing techniques, such as e.g. screen-printing, gravure printing, inkjet-printing or, marginally, 3D printing. Screen-printing, gravure printing and inkjet-printing are roll-to-roll compatible and ideally suited to manufacturing low-cost, single-use or disposable electronics on flexible substrate such as e.g. paper, polyimide or PET. 3D printing enables the integration of active components with structural components in a single manufacturing procedure.
Jakus et al. (ACS Nano, 9:4, 4636-4648, 2015) discloses the use of graphene, a component for use in electronics, optoelectronics, energy storage and structural composites, in 3D liquid ink printable graphene (3DG) composites consisting mainly of graphene and to a minor part of polylactide-co-glycolide, a biocompatible elastomer. The resulting 3DG material is robust, flexible and displays electrical conductivities greater than 800 S/m. In vitro the 3DG material supports adhesion, viability, proliferation and differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells and biocompatibility in vivo.
Apart from the manufacturing, the water stability of biodegradable electronics is a recurring issue and, to date, impedes a large-scale establishment of cheap and disposable electronics. Water permeability accelerates disintegration, which ultimately leads to biodegradation. However, the oxidation and dissolution of transient metals in water occurs quickly and are detrimental to electronics functionalities. Water-soluble biodegradable polymers such as e.g. cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose, hydroxypropyl cellulose or polyvinyl alcohol, and water permeable polymers such as e.g. polylactic acid, poly lactic-glycolic acid, polyglycolic acid or polycaprolactone have low water-uptake rates and solubility but still require encapsulation to increase the shelf-life of devices before electronic functionalities failure.
Power supply is the cornerstone of disposable electronics. Thus far, they still require batch-fabricated batteries e.g. lithium-ion or alkaline batteries. These comprise toxic materials with predefined specifications and geometries, thus limiting their disposability and integration. Alternatively, RFID antennas or energy harvesting devices such as triboelectric, thermoelectric and piezoelectric generators can be made from biodegradable materials but the power generation remains highly dependent on the operating environment. This drawback can be circumvented by coupling the harvester to an energy storage module undergoing multiple charge and discharge cycles at various rates and capable of accumulating and releasing the harvested energy when needed. Supercapacitors are ideally suited as energy storage module for biodegradable harvesters for low cost disposable (IoT) electronics.
Supercapacitors and specifically electrical-double-layer-capacitors (EDLC) are known for their long cycle life, high power density, high capacitance and fast charging rate. Their maximum operating voltage is limited with aqueous electrolytes to 1.2 V and higher voltage can be achieved by connecting several of them in series. EDLC are composed of two electrodes separated by an electrolyte solution. Charges of opposite polarity accumulate at the electrode-electrolyte interface separated by a monolayer of solvent molecules. The small dimension of this molecular gap enables higher capacitance than standard dielectric capacitors. Without charge transfer between electrode and electrolyte EDLC are strictly electrostatic and they can be prepared from biodegradable and edible materials rendering these capacitators disposable and eco-friendly.
Carbon-based materials used as electrodes and current collectors in supercapacitors have been reported to have a specific capacitance maximum value of 30 F g−1 for all-carbon EDLC when combined with a non-toxic electrolyte. The different components of EDLCs are typically challenging to integrate in a single manufacturing technique. In fact, most of the state-of-the-art printed EDLCs require post processing or assembly. The only reported fully printed EDLCs are based on toxic electrolyte and non-disposable materials with a maximum capacitance of 2 F g−1.
Robocasting is a direct ink writing (DIW) technique for producing 3D printed structures in the mm to cm scale with high-aspect ratio and spanning features. The presently available techniques can be classified as filament-based, e.g. robocasting, solvent-casting, fused deposition and micropen writing, or as droplet-based, e.g. inkjet, binder jet and hot-melt printing. Robocasting is compatible with a wide range of materials and prints viscous and high solid content inks, typically by mechanical or pneumatic extrusion through a printing nozzle. For shape fidelity the extruded filament must maintain its shape once printed. This is achieved with shear-thinning gel-inks that exhibit liquid-like behaviour in the nozzle, i.e. under external shear stress, and gel-like behavior with enough elasticity to prevent flow and deformation of the printed material when shearing ceases.
Robocasting differs from solvent-casting, a different DIW technique for which shape retention of the printed filament is ensured by rapid solvent evaporation rather than the ink's rheology. For robocasting a wide range of materials have been printed including metals, polymers, graphene and biomaterials, allowing for the creation of structures with specific functional properties such as biocompatibility, ferroelectricity, enhanced catalytic activity and high electrical conductivity. Robocasting inks typically include a combination of binders, solvents, and additives to achieve the required rheology and confer the desired physical properties. Electrically conductive inks based on different types of metal and carbon particles have been reported. Binders for robocasting inks include synthetic polymers such as epoxy, polyurethane, poly(acrylic acid), polyvinylidene fluoride and pluronic; bio-based polymers such as nanocellulose and carboxymethylcellulose; as well as inorganic materials such as graphene oxide and ceramics. Combinations of solvents can also be used to develop binder-free inks but are typically poorly adapted to printing 3D structures due to the drastic shrinkage experienced upon drying.
It is the objective of the present invention to provide new and improved shear-thinning gels, in particular gels that are essentially non-toxic, environmentally safe, cost-efficient and electronically conductive for utility in 2D and 3D DIW techniques, in particular, in filament-based techniques such as robocasting. Furthermore, it is an objective to provide such improved gel compositions for manufacturing electronic devices, optionally fully 3D-printed electronic devices, such as for example, flexible electronic devices, biosensors, logic and memory devices, batteries, flexible batteries, capacitive sensors, RFID tags, supercapacitors and smart packaging.
In a first aspect, the present invention is directed to a shear-thinning gel composition for producing a dry, water-stable and electronically conductive ink, comprising:
It was surprisingly found that a composition comprising specific ratios of (i) dispersed electronically conductive graphite flakes combined with dispersed electrically conductive particles of carbon black and/or conductive pyrolized plant carbon components, and (ii) suitably dissolved binders based on or consisting of shellac have utility as shear-thinning gel composition for producing improved dry, water-stable and electronically conductive inks.
These gel ink compositions are improved over previous gel ink compositions because the resulting printed and vaporized products are economical, non-toxic and environmentally non-hazardous due to the electronically conductive carbon components and the natural shellac or shellac-based binder, and feature high electronic conductivity, excellent printability and do not produce cracks after evaporation of solvent(s).
For example, the gel compositions will enable shape retention when 3D printed, e.g. by robocasting, display high electrical conductivity of >200 S/m, offer metal-free, non-toxic and sustainable alternatives to metal-based electrodes, are water stable when printed and dried, thus enabling a humidity-stable electrical performance and feature a sustainable bio-sourced and biodegradable shellac or shellac-based binder that is soluble in suitable low-toxicity solvents.
As demonstrated experimentally, the gel compositions of the present invention can, for example, be used to manufacture fully printed supercapacitors having ten times higher specific capacitance than those previously reported for printed gel compositions of the state of the art.
The term shear-thinning gel composition as used herein is understood as common in the art, i.e. as a non-Newtonian fluid composition in gel form, e.g. a shear-thinning gel that becomes less viscous with increased strain, e.g. when shaken, agitated, sheared or otherwise shear-stressed.
The shear-thinning compositions for use in the present invention optionally retain their printed shape and do not flow. In other words, the yield stress of the inks can be adapted as needed for the specific application.
The dispersed electrically conductive particles comprise (i) graphite flakes, also called crystalline small graphite flakes, a non-toxic, naturally occurring type of graphite mineral consisting of carbon and typically in the form of isolated, flat, plate-like particles with either hexagonal or angular edges if unbroken or with broken irregular or angular edges. It is regularly found in metamorphic rocks such as limestone, gneiss and schist. It has numerous applications, for example, in the auto industry, and it is the type of graphite required for anodes of lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles. Graphite flakes are flat and plate-like and their dimensions are given with (maximum) length and thickness. The flakes dimensioned for use in the present invention establish conductivity and contribute to the film integrity of the gel composition.
In one embodiment for the gel composition of the present invention the electrically conductive graphite flakes have a length of 1 to 100 μm, optionally 1 to 20 μm, optionally about 7 μm, and/or a thickness of 20 to 250 nm, optionally 150 to 250, optionally of about 200 nm.
The further type of electronically conductive particles (i.2) is carbon black and/or conductive pyrolyzed plant carbon components, optionally pyrolyzed cellulose or lignin.
Carbon black and its subtypes such as but not limited to acetylene black, channel black, furnace black, lamp black and thermal black is a material produced by the incomplete combustion of petroleum products such as but not limited to FCC tar, coal tar, ethylene cracking tar or plant carbon components. e.g. cellulose or lignin. Carbon black is para-crystalline and has a high surface-area-to-volume ratio, albeit lower than that of activated carbon. It is dissimilar to soot in its much higher surface-area-to-volume ratio and significantly lower (negligible and non-bioavailable) polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) content.
In an optional embodiment the further type of electronically conductive particles (i.2) is carbon black and/or conductive pyrolized plant carbon components, optionally pyrolyzed cellulose or lignin, having a size, i.e. a maximum diameter, of 10 to 100 nm, optionally 20 to 60, optionally of about 40 nm.
The graphite flakes and further electronically conductive particles together form the dispersed electrically conductive particles (i) of the gel composition and are stably statistically distributed, optionally colloidally distributed in the gel composition, i.e. forming a dispersion in the dissolved binder over time and at least under ambient conditions.
The second essential component of the gel composition of the present invention is a dissolved binder based on or consisting of shellac. The term “shellac” as used herein refers to a natural biopolymer resin secreted by the female lac bug on trees in India and Thailand. Typically, it is processed and sold as dry flakes or optionally dissolved in alcohol to make liquid shellac. Shellac has utility as a tough natural primer, sanding sealant, brush-on colorant, food glaze, wood finish, tannin-blocker, odour-blocker, stain and high-gloss varnish. It is naturally adhesive. Mild hydrolysis of shellac gives a complex mix of aliphatic and alicyclic hydroxy acids and their polymers that varies in exact composition depending upon the source of the shellac and the harvest season. The major part of the aliphatic component is aleuritic acid, whereas the main alicyclic component is shellolic acid. Shellac possesses good electrical insulation qualities and seals out moisture. Shellac naturally contains a small amount of wax, about 3 to 5 vol-%. In some shellac-based preparations, e.g. “dewaxed shellac”, this wax is removed.
The binder based on or consisting of shellac for use in the gel composition of the invention can be suitably dissolved in a wide variety of chemically different solvents or solvent mixtures. However, for preparing the shear-thinning gel composition and for use in the preparation of dry printed products it is optionally dissolved in at least one solvent or a mixture of solvents having a vapor pressure between about 1 Pa and 6 kPa, optionally between about 200 Pa and 3 kPa, optionally about 200 Pa.
In optional embodiments of the invention the at least one solvent for dissolving the shellac (based) binder is selected from the group consisting of acetic acid, benzyl alcohol, n-butylalcohol, ethanol, ethylene glycol mono butyl ether, 2-butoxyethanol, ethylene glycol mono propyl ether, methanol, 1-pentanol, iso-propanol, n-propanol, tetrahydrofurane, optionally the group consisting of iso-butylalcohol, 1,4-butylene glycol, cyclohexanone, 1,4-dioxan, methylethylketone, 1,2-propylene glycol and a combination of a fast and a slow vaporizing solvent, optionally a combination of a fast and a slow vaporizing solvent with a difference in boiling points of at least 20, 30 or 40° C. (at standard conditions), optionally a combination of ethanol and pentanol, optionally in a ratio of about 10 to 0.1, optionally in a ratio of about 1 to 0.5.
The gel composition of the present invention may comprise further components that do not disrupt its shear-thinning, gel-forming, conductive and other desirable properties. For example, the gel composition may further comprise one or more components, optionally selected from color agent, plasticizer, dispersant, thickener, film forming agent, reducing agent, crosslinking agent, photoinitiator, and thermal initiator. Optionally, the plasticiser is a non-toxic plasticiser selected from the group consisting of waxes, fatty oils, oleoresin and polyethylene glycol, optionally PEG400.
The improved properties of the gel compositions of the present invention reflect the
Optionally, the solid content of the gel composition is about 10 to 80, optionally about 30 to 70, optionally about 58.5 parts by weight.
In one alternative for practicing the present invention, the gel composition is one wherein (a) the graphite flakes (i.1) have a length of about 1 to 100 μm, optionally about 1 to 20 μm, optionally about 7 μm, and/or a thickness of 20 nm to 220 nm, optionally about 150 to 220, optionally about 200 nm; and/or
The gel compositions of the present invention are particularly useful for preparing, optionally ink-jet printing or robocasting 2D or 3D print products, in particular for preparing electronic devices.
In one embodiment the gel composition of the present invention has at least one or more, optionally all of the following properties:
When processed, for example, by 2D or 3D ink-jet printing or robocasting for producing 2D or 3D print products, e.g. for preparing electronic devices, the gel compositions of the present invention consequently form dried, dimensionally stable, solid compositions lacking the solvent component and essentially free of any cracks. Therefore, in a further aspect, the present invention is also directed to a dried composition resulting from the gel composition of the present invention after solvent evaporation, optionally comprising graphite flakes (i.1) and at least one further type of electronically conductive particles (i.2) forming about 10 to 90, optionally about 50 to 70, optionally about 63 parts by weight of the solid composition, and optionally having an electric conductivity of at least 1 to 10′000 optionally 100 to 1′000, optionally about 200 S/m.
In principle, the gel compositions of the present invention can be prepared by any methods that homogeneously and colloidally disperse the (i.1) graphite flakes and the (i.2) at least one further type of electronically conductive particles, i.e. carbon black and/or conductive pyrolyzed plant carbon components in the appropriately dissolved binder, the solvent being capable of binder dissolution and having a vapor pressure between 1 Pa and 6 kPa, optionally between 200 Pa and 3 kPa, optionally about 200 Pa.
In one embodiment the gel composition of the present invention can be prepared by a method comprising the steps of
In an alternative embodiment the gel composition of the present invention can be prepared by a method comprising the steps of
Optionally, the gel compositions resulting from the above method have at least one or more, optionally all of the rheology properties a. to c., i.e. (a.) about 108 to 102, optionally 106 to 104, optionally about 105 Pa storage modulus, (b.) about 107 to 101, optionally 105 to 103, optionally about 104 Pa storage modulus loss, and/or (c) about 1 to 105, optionally 10 to 104, optionally around 100 MPa apparent yield stress.
In another alternative embodiment the gel composition of the present invention can be prepared by a method comprising the steps of
Optionally, the methods for preparing gel compositions of the present invention may further comprise a step wherein the at least one solvent(s) is removed by vaporization, optionally at ambient temperature, optionally about 40 to 80, optionally at about 60° C., thus preparing a dried composition of the present invention, e.g. when ink-jet printing or robocasting 2D or 3D print products.
The gel compositions and subsequently dried compositions of the present invention can be used as inks, optionally for preparing, optionally ink-jet printing or robocasting, 2D or 3D print products, optionally electrically conductive 2D and 3D print products, optionally products selected from the group consisting of 3D inks, electronic devices, optionally flexible electronic devices, biosensors, logic and memory devices, supercapacitors, batteries, optionally flexible batteries, capacitive sensors, RFID tags, and smart packaging.
The gel compositions of the present invention demonstrate excellent properties for robocasting, in particular electronic devices, for example environmentally sustainable IOT devices. In a further aspect the present invention concerns a method for robocasting electronically conductive products, wherein the composition of the invention is robocasted line-by-line and layer-by-layer onto a substrate of interest.
In the following the invention is illustrated by representative examples and figures, none of which are to be interpreted as limiting the scope of the invention beyond the appended claims.
In the following examples relating to
Each gel-ink was prepared following an identical procedure. First, the shellac was dissolved in pentanol for 1 hour at 90° C. with a magnetic stirrer. The electrically conductive particles were dispersed with the dissolved binder with a speedmixer DAC 600.2 VAC-P from SpeedMixer, Germany, with one ball per 3 g of inks for 1 min at 2350 rpm. The rheology was adjusted by adding solvent whenever needed to reach the desired viscosity ranges.
The electrical conductivity was measured by stencil printing the gel-inks on glass substrates with a PET mask. Three samples of 8 cm by 8 mm, 8 cm by 4 mm and 8 cm by 2 mm were printed for each gel-inks. The printed samples were dried for 12 h in an oven at 60° C. and measured with a two-probes multi-meter. An MCR 302 rheometer from Anton Paar, Switzerland, was used with a plate-plate geometry with 1 mm gap and 15 mm plate diameter to investigate the rheology. Viscosity curves were obtained with a sweep of the shear rate from 0.01 s−1 to 100 s−1 sampled 4 times per decade. The oscillatory measurements were carried out at 1 Hz, from 0.1 to 1000% deformation sampled at 8 points per decade.
The gel-ink can be used with 3D robocasting, as demonstrated in
The gel-ink can be used as current collector for energy storage applications as demonstrated in
The device was characterized at 50% RH and 22° C. Cyclic voltammetry, chronopotentiometry and impedance spectroscopy were carried out in a 4-wire configuration, connected to the 3×5 mm current collector pads. The capacitance was determined with cyclic voltammetry using the following formula:
Where, sr is the scan-rate in V s−1, i the current, Qtotal the total charge and ΔV the potential window between Vmax and Vmin. The function trapz from MATLAB is used for the numerical integration. The equivalent-series-resistance (ESR) and capacitance were determined with the chronopotentiometry using the following formulas:
Where Vdrop is the voltage drop observed when switching the polarity, i the current applied, Δt the charge or discharge time (i.e. depending on the polarity) and ΔV the voltage drop during Δt.
Finally, impedance spectroscopy and the simple double layer lumped-model were used to quantify the series resistance Rs, by taking the value of the real impedance when the imaginary part is equal to zero.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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21151491.4 | Jan 2021 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2022/050716 | 1/14/2022 | WO |