Comparative Study of Inkjet-Printed Silver Conductive Traces With Thermal and Electrical Sintering
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Escobedo Araque, Pablo; Carvajal Rodríguez, Miguel Ángel; Banqueri Ozáez, Jesús; Martínez Olmos, Antonio; Capitán Vallvey, Luis Fermín; Palma López, Alberto JoséEditorial
IEEE
Materia
Electrical sintering Inkjet printing Microstrip transmission line Silver nanoparticle ink Thermal sintering
Fecha
2018-12-28Referencia bibliográfica
Escobedo, P., Carvajal, M. A., Banqueri, J., Martínez-Olmos, A., Capitán-Vallvey, L. F., & Palma, A. J. (2018). Comparative Study of Inkjet-Printed Silver Conductive Traces With Thermal and Electrical Sintering. IEEE Access, 7, 1909-1919.
Patrocinador
This work was supported in part by the Spanish Ministry of Economics and Competitiveness under Grant CTQ2016-78754-C2-1-R.Resumen
Thermal sintering has traditionally been the most popular sintering method to enhance
conductivity after the printing process in the manufacturing of printed electronics. Nevertheless, in recent
years, there has been a growing interest in electrical sintering as an alternative method to overcome some of
the limitations of thermal curing. This paper makes a comparative study of both sintering methods in terms of
surface morphology, electrical dc conductance, and radiofrequency performance for different applied voltage
waveforms. To this end, microstrip transmission lines have been inkjet-printed using nanoparticle-based
silver ink on flexible polyimide substrate. The traces have been tested under different sintering conditions,
achieving electrical sintering resistivity values only 2.3 times higher than that of bulk silver. This implies a
62% reduction in comparison with the best resistivity value achieved using thermal sintering in our samples.
The main novelty of this contribution lies in the analysis of RF behavior as a function of electrical sintering
conditions. Lower resistivities have been achieved with slower voltage ramps or allowing higher density
current during sintering. It has also been proved that electrically sintered lines have similar RF performance
than high-temperature thermally sintered lines in terms of insertion losses, regardless of their very different
surface topology. Therefore, we can take advantage of the benefits that electrical sintering offers over thermal
sintering regarding significant shorter sintering times maintaining suitable RF performance.