posted on 2022-08-18, 10:20authored byJinxin Yang, Pei He, Brian Derby
Continuous conducting lines of width 5–20 μm
have
been printed with a Ag nanoparticle ink using drop-on-demand (DOD)
electrohydrodynamic (EHD) inkjet printing on Si and PDMS substrates,
with advancing contact angles of 11° and 35°, respectively,
and a zero receding contact angle. It is only possible to achieve
stable parallel sided lines within a limited range of drop spacings,
and this limiting range for stable line printing decreases as the
contact angle of the ink on the substrate increases. The upper bound
drop spacing for stable line formation is determined by a minimum
drop overlap required to prevent contact line retraction, and the
lower bound is governed by competing flows for drop spreading onto
an unwetted substrate and a return flow driven by a Laplace pressure
difference between the newly deposited drops and the fluid some distance
from the growing tip. The upper and lower bounds are shown to be consistent
with those predicted using existing models for the stability of inkjet
printed lines produced using piezoelectric droplet generators. A comparison
with literature data for EHD printed lines finds that these limiting
bounds apply with printed line widths as small as 200 nm using subfemtoliter
drop volumes. When a fine grid pattern is printed, local differences
in Laplace pressure lead to the line width retracting to the minimum
stable width and excess ink being transported to the nodes of the
grid. After printing and sintering, the printed tracks have a conductivity
of about 15%–20% of bulk Ag on the Si substrate, which correlates
with a porosity of about 60%.