posted on 2019-01-15, 00:00authored byHasan Shahariar, Inhwan Kim, Henry Soewardiman, Jesse S. Jur
Inkjet printing of functional inks
on textiles to embed passive
electronics devices and sensors is a novel approach in the space of
wearable electronic textiles. However, achieving functionality such
as conductivity by inkjet printing on textiles is challenged by the
porosity and surface roughness of textiles. Nanoparticle-based conductive
inks frequently cause blockage/clogging of inkjet printer nozzles,
making it a less than ideal method for applying these functional materials.
It is also very challenging to create a conformal conductive coating
and achieve electrically conductive percolation with the inkjet printing
of metal nanoparticle inks on rough and porous textile and paper substrates.
Herein, a novel reliable and conformal inkjet printing process is
demonstrated for printing particle-free reactive silver ink on uncoated
polyester textile knit, woven, and nonwoven fabrics. The particle-free
functional ink can conformally coat individual fibers to create a
conductive network within the textile structure without changing the
feel, texture, durability, and mechanical behavior of the textile.
It was found that the conductivity and the resolution of the inkjet-printed
tracks are directly related with the packing and the tightness of
fabric structures and fiber sizes of the fabrics. It is noteworthy
that the electrical conductivity of the inkjet-printed conductive
coating on pristine polyethylene terephthalate fibers is improved
by an order of magnitude by in situ heat-curing of the textile surface
during printing as the in situ heat-curing process minimizes the wicking
of the ink into the textile structures. A minimum sheet resistance
of 0.2 ± 0.025 and 0.9 ± 0.02 Ω/□ on polyester
woven and polyester knit fabrics is achieved, respectively. These
findings aim to advance E-textile product design through integration
of inkjet printing as a low-cost, scalable, and automated manufacturing
process.