posted on 2021-06-02, 18:37authored byH. Clive Liu, Anesia D. Auguste, James O. Hardin, Andrew Sharits, J. Daniel Berrigan
Polyimides
are widely utilized engineering polymers due to their
excellent balance of mechanical, dielectric, and thermal properties.
However, the manufacturing of polyimides into complex multifunctional
designs can be hindered by dimensional shrinkage of the polymer upon
imidization and post processing methods and inability to tailor electronic
or mechanical properties. In this work, we developed methods to three-dimensional
(3D) direct ink write polyimide closed-cell stochastic foams with
tunable densities. These polyimide structures preserve the geometrical
fidelity of 3D design with a linear shrinkage value of <10% and
displayed microscale porosity ranging from 25 to 35%. This unique
balance of morphology and direct-write compatibility was enabled by
polymer phase inversion behavior without the need of conventional
post-print cross-linking, imidization, or pore-inducing freeze processing.
The manufacturability, thermal stability, and dielectric properties
of the 3D polyimide stochastic foams reported here serve as enablers
for the exploration of hierarchical, lightweight, high-temperature,
high-power electronics.