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Electrical and mechanical properties of ink printed composite electrodes on plastic substrates

  • Xinda Wang
  • , Wei Guo
  • , Ying Zhu
  • , Xiaokang Liang
  • , Fude Wang
  • , Peng Peng*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Beihang University
  • China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Printed flexible electrodes with conductive inks have attracted much attention in wearable electronics, flexible displays, radio-frequency identification, etc. Conventional conductive inks contain large amount of polymer which would increase the electrical resistivity of as-printed electrodes and require high sintering temperature. Here, composite electrodes without cracks were printed on polyimide substrate using binder-free silver nanoparticle based inks with zero-dimensional (activated carbon), one-dimensional (silver nanowire and carbon nanotube) or two-dimensional (graphene) fillers. The effect of fillers on resistivity and flexibility of printed composite electrodes were evaluated. The graphene filler could reduce the resistivity of electrodes, reaching 1.7 × 10-7 Ω·m after low power laser sintering, while the silver nanowire filler improved their flexibility largely during bending tests. The microstructural changes were examined to understand the nanojoining process and their properties.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2101
JournalApplied Sciences (Switzerland)
Volume8
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2018

Keywords

  • Ink printing
  • Laser sintering
  • Mechanical performance
  • Nanojoining

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