4.3 Article

Strongly adhesive and flexible transparent silver nanowire conductive films fabricated with a high-intensity pulsed light technique

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY
Volume 22, Issue 44, Pages 23561-23567

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c2jm35545k

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Large-scale silver nanowire (AgNW) mesh films have received increasing attention as new transparent conductive films used in various printed devices. However, there are two crucial issues in implementing AgNWs that need to be addressed: (1) strong adhesion between AgNW film and substrate and (2) high conductivity with short treatment time for low-cost printed technology. Here, a high-intensity pulsed light (HIPL) sintering technique, which provides extreme heating locally in the AgNW film and at the interface between the film and polymer substrate, sinters the AgNW film to produce high conductivity with strong adhesion on the substrate. Importantly, light intensity, exposure time, and AgNW amount can be adjusted simply to form films that meet specific device needs. A flexible AgNW film with sheet resistance of 19 Omega sq(-1) and transmittance of 83% at 550 nm is obtained with only one-step on a polyethylene terephthalate substrate with a light intensity of 1.14 J cm(-2) under an exposure time of only 50 mu s. The film can endure multiple peeling tests, which will play an important role in printed electronics.

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