Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • Electroless Deposition-Assisted 3D Printing of Micro Circuitries for Structural Electronics.

Electroless Deposition-Assisted 3D Printing of Micro Circuitries for Structural Electronics.

ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019-01-27)
Sanghyeon Lee, Muhammad Wajahat, Jung Hyun Kim, Jaeyeon Pyo, Won Suk Chang, Sung Ho Cho, Ji Tae Kim, Seung Kwon Seol
ABSTRACT

Three-dimensional (3D) printing is a next-generation free-form manufacturing technology for structural electronics. The realization of structural electronic devices necessitates the direct integration of electronic circuits into 3D objects. However, creating highly conductive, high-resolution patterns in 3D remains a major challenge. Here, we report on a metallic 3D printing method that incorporates electroless deposition (ELD) into the direct ink writing method. Our approach consists of two steps: (1) direct ink writing of catalyst microstructures with a functional catalyst ink containing Ag ions and (2) ELD of Cu onto the printed catalyst structures. High-quality, stable Cu 3D printing is achieved through the design of the Ag catalyst ink; hydroxypropyl cellulose is added as both a rheological modifier (printing) and dissolution inhibitor (ELD). As a result, various two-dimensional (2D) and 3D Cu micro circuitries with high conductivity (∼65% of bulk) can be directly integrated onto 3D plastic substrates without the need for high-temperature annealing. A hybrid strategy that combines ELD-assisted 3D printing and conventional fused deposition modeling enables full fabrication of structural electronic devices. This 3D printing strategy can be a low-cost and facile method for obtaining highly conductive metallic 2D and 3D microstructures in structural electronics.