| Literature DB >> 26985790 |
Johannes H M Maurer1, Lola González-García1, Beate Reiser1, Ioannis Kanelidis1, Tobias Kraus1.
Abstract
We fabricated flexible, transparent, and conductive metal grids as transparent conductive materials (TCM) with adjustable properties by direct nanoimprinting of self-assembling colloidal metal nanowires. Ultrathin gold nanowires (diameter below 2 nm) with high mechanical flexibility were confined in a stamp and readily adapted to its features. During drying, the wires self-assembled into dense bundles that percolated throughout the stamp. The high aspect ratio and the bundling yielded continuous, hierarchical superstructures that connected the entire mesh even at low gold contents. A soft sintering step removed the ligand barriers but retained the imprinted structure. The material exhibited high conductivities (sheet resistances down to 29 Ω/sq) and transparencies that could be tuned by changing wire concentration and stamp geometry. We obtained TCMs that are suitable for applications such as touch screens. Mechanical bending tests showed a much higher bending resistance than commercial ITO: conductivity dropped by only 5.6% after 450 bending cycles at a bending radius of 5 mm.Entities:
Keywords: Metal grids; flexible electronics; nanoimprint; transparent conductive electrodes; ultrathin gold nanowires
Year: 2016 PMID: 26985790 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b04319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189