4.8 Article

Self-Reducing Silver Ink on Polyurethane Elastomers for the Manufacture of Thin and Highly Stretchable Electrical Circuits

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 8, Pages 2742-2755

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c04025

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Funding

  1. Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) [848632]

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Stretchable conductive films were obtained through screen printing and thermal treatment of a homogenous ink, showing low resistivity and high stretchability. The composite demonstrated superior performance compared to some commercial stretchable screen-printing inks in terms of resistivity and resistance to cyclic tensile loading.
Stretchable conductive films were obtained by screen printing and thermal treatment of a homogenous ink comprising a thermally reducible silver formate complex, an acrylate monomer, and a radical initiator. In the curing process, both the filler nanoparticles and the polymer matrix are generated in situ, at temperatures as low as 100 degrees C. The obtained conductors, consisting of percolated silver nanoparticles embedded in a polymeric matrix, typically show a resistivity of (2-4) x 10(-5) Omega.m. When applied on an elastomeric substrate, the composite is stretchable up to 200% with very low R/R-0 values, which is unprecedented for stretchable silver composite inks. Quasi-in situ confocal laser scanning microscopy of the strained samples revealed an initial fracture strain above 40%, which is unusually high for metal-nanoparticle films. The described system was compared to some commercial stretchable screen-printing inks and proved superior with regard to both R/R-0 and resistance to cyclic tensile loading.

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