4.6 Article

Thermal cure effects on electromechanical properties of conductive wires by direct ink write for 4D printing and soft machines

期刊

SMART MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
卷 26, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-665X/aa5cca

关键词

3D printing; direct ink write; 4D printing; soft machines; conductive inks

资金

  1. AFOSR grants [FA9550-13-1-0088, 15RT0885]
  2. NSF award [CMMI-1462894, CMMI-1462895]
  3. PhD Mobility Program at Xi'an Jiaotong University
  4. Georgia Tech's Institute of Electronics and Nanotechnology (IEN)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent developments in soft materials and 3D printing are promoting the rapid development of novel technologies and concepts, such as 4D printing and soft machines, that in turn require new methods for fabricating conductive materials. Despite the ubiquity of silver nanoparticles (NPs) in the conducting electrodes of printed electronic devices, their potential use in stretchable conductors has not been fully explored in 4D printing and soft machines. This paper studies the effect of thermal cure conditions on conductivity and electro-mechanical behaviors of silver ink by the direct ink write (DIW) printing approach. We found that the electro-mechanical properties of silver wires can be tailored by controlling cure time and cure temperature to achieve conductivity as well as stretchability. For the silver NP ink we used in the experiments, silver wires cured at 80 degrees C for 10-30 min have conductivity >1% bulk silver, Young's modulus <100 MPa, yield strain similar to 9%, and can retain conductivity up to 300% strain. In addition, under stress controlled cyclic loading/unloading conditions, the resistance of these wires is only about 1.3 times the initial value after the 100th repeat cycle (7.6% maximum strain in the first cycle). Silver wires cured at 120 degrees C for 10-20 min are more sensitive to strain and have a yield strain of around 6%. These properties indicate that the silver ink can be used to fabricate stretchable electrodes and flex sensors. Using the DIW fabrication method, we printed silver ink patterns on the surface of 3D printed polymer parts, with the future goal of constructing fully 3D printed arbitrarily formed soft and stretchable devices and of applying them to 4D printing. We demonstrated a fully printed functional soft-matter sensor and a circuit element that can be stretched by as much as 45%.

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