Revisiting the inhomogeneity in drop-on-demand printing of graphene: An effective route for overcoming the coffee-ring effect

Graphene patterns by drop-on-demand (DOD) printing are promising for fabricating functional devices in industry. However, uneven solute distribution caused by the coffee-ring effect is an obstacle to the uniform morphology and high performance of graphene patterns. Here, we develop a strategy to sup...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surfaces and interfaces 2024-03, Vol.46, p.104036, Article 104036
Hauptverfasser: Niu, Jianing, Qi, Lehua, Lian, Hongcheng, Luo, Jun, Zhang, Ruirui, Chao, Xujiang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Graphene patterns by drop-on-demand (DOD) printing are promising for fabricating functional devices in industry. However, uneven solute distribution caused by the coffee-ring effect is an obstacle to the uniform morphology and high performance of graphene patterns. Here, we develop a strategy to suppress and eliminate the coffee ring of graphene droplets based on porous cellulose nanopaper (CNP), without dependence on ink properties and environment. A theoretical droplet model concerning both infiltration and evaporation on porous surfaces with nanoscale pores is proposed to predict deposition patterns and uncover the suppression mechanism of coffee-ring depositions. Coffee-ring patterns on the CNP could be tailored by the time scale ratio of the graphene flake migration (τf) to the total pinning (τe+i) of evaporation and infiltration. The efficacy of coffee-ring inhibition using CNP is demonstrated by comparing drying behaviors and deposition patterns of graphene droplets on glass and CNP substrates experimentally. Further, a parameter map relating graphene concentration and droplet size (c-d0) is summarized to identify regions of uniform pattern printing through theoretical and experimental investigations. This work effectively eliminates graphene coffee-ring effect and provides guidance for other functional materials, opening up opportunities for smart devices built through DOD printing. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2468-0230
2468-0230
DOI:10.1016/j.surfin.2024.104036