Nanodroplet Flight Control in Electrohydrodynamic Redox 3D Printing
Electrohydrodynamic 3D printing is an additive manufacturing technique with enormous potential in plasmonics, microelectronics, and sensing applications, thanks to its broad materials palette, high voxel deposition rate, and compatibility with various substrates. However, the electric field used to...
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Zusammenfassung: | Electrohydrodynamic 3D printing is an additive manufacturing technique with
enormous potential in plasmonics, microelectronics, and sensing applications,
thanks to its broad materials palette, high voxel deposition rate, and
compatibility with various substrates. However, the electric field used to
deposit material is concentrated at the depositing structure resulting in the
focusing of the charged droplets and geometry-dependent landing positions,
which complicates the fabrication of complex 3D shapes. The low level of
concordance between design and printout seriously impedes the development of
electrohydrodynamic 3D printing and rationalizes the simplicity of the designs
reported so far. In this work, we break the electric field centrosymmetry to
study the resulting deviation in the flight trajectory of the droplets.
Comparison of experimental outcomes with predictions of an FEM model provides
new insights into the droplet characteristics and unveils how the product of
droplet size and charge uniquely governs its kinematics. From these insights,
we develop reliable predictions of the jet trajectory and allow the computation
of optimized printing paths counterbalancing the electric field distortion,
thereby enabling the fabrication of geometries with unprecedented complexity. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2308.08323 |