posted on 2015-10-07, 00:00authored byMalo Robin, Wenlin Kuai, Maria Amela-Cortes, Stéphane Cordier, Yann Molard, Tayeb Mohammed-Brahim, Emmanuel Jacques, Maxime Harnois
Drop
on Demand inkjet printing is an attractive method for device
fabrication. However, the reliability of the key printing steps is
still challenging. This explains why versatile functional inks are
needed. Epoxy based ink described in this study could solve this critical
issue because it can be printed with low drawbacks (satellites droplets,
long-lived filaments, etc.). Moreover, a wide concentration range
of solute allows the fabrication of films from thin to high aspect
ratio. Optimizing experimental parameters (temperature, overlap) and
ink composition (single or cosolvent) is useful to tune the film profile.
As a result, many shapes can be obtained such as donuts or hemispherical
caps for a droplet and smooth or wavy shape for a thin film. This
study demonstrates that epoxy based versatile ink can be used in numerous
fields of applications (organic electronics, optics, sensors, MEMS,
etc.). To prove this assertion, organic field effect transistors and
light emitting films have been fabricated.