Expeditious low-temperature sintering of copper nanoparticles with thin defective carbon shells

The realization of air-stable nanoparticles, well-formulated nanoinks, and conductive patterns based on copper is a great challenge in low-cost and large-area flexible printed electronics. This work reports the synthesis of a conductively interconnected copper structure via thermal sintering of copp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nanoscale 2015-04, Vol.7 (15), p.6627-6635
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Changkyu, Lee, Gyoungja, Rhee, Changkyu, Lee, Minku
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The realization of air-stable nanoparticles, well-formulated nanoinks, and conductive patterns based on copper is a great challenge in low-cost and large-area flexible printed electronics. This work reports the synthesis of a conductively interconnected copper structure via thermal sintering of copper inks at a low temperature for a short period of time, with the help of thin defective carbon shells coated onto the copper nanoparticles. Air-stable copper/carbon core/shell nanoparticles (typical size ∼23 nm, shell thickness ∼1.0 nm) are prepared by means of an electric explosion of wires. Gaseous oxidation of the carbon shells with a defective structure occurs at 180 °C, impacting the choice of organic solvents as well as the sintering conditions to create a crucial neck formation. Isothermal oxidation and reduction treatment at 200 °C for only about 10 min yields an oxide-free copper network structure with an electrical resistivity of 25.1 μΩ cm (14.0 μΩ cm at 250 °C). Finally, conductive copper line patterns are achieved down to a 50 μm width with an excellent printing resolution (standard deviation ∼4.0%) onto a polyimide substrate using screen printing of the optimized inks.
ISSN:2040-3364
2040-3372
DOI:10.1039/c5nr00956a