| Literature DB >> 27501761 |
Winco K C Yung1, Bo Sun1,2, Junfeng Huang1, Yingdi Jin3, Zhengong Meng4, Hang Shan Choy1, Zhixiang Cai1, Guijun Li1, Cheuk Lam Ho4, Jinlong Yang3, Wai Yeung Wong4,5.
Abstract
3D printing using thermoplastics has become very popular in recent years, however, it is challenging to provide a metal coating on 3D objects without using specialized and expensive tools. Herein, a novel acrylic paint containing malachite for coating on 3D printed objects is introduced, which can be transformed to copper via one-step laser treatment. The malachite containing pigment can be used as a commercial acrylic paint, which can be brushed onto 3D printed objects. The material properties and photochemical transformation processes have been comprehensively studied. The underlying physics of the photochemical synthesis of copper was characterized using density functional theory calculations. After laser treatment, the surface coating of the 3D printed objects was transformed to copper, which was experimentally characterized by XRD. 3D printed prototypes, including model of the Statue of Liberty covered with a copper surface coating and a robotic hand with copper interconnections, are demonstrated using this painting method. This composite material can provide a novel solution for coating metals on 3D printed objects. The photochemical reduction analysis indicates that the copper rust in malachite form can be remotely and photo-chemically reduced to pure copper with sufficient photon energy.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27501761 PMCID: PMC4977584 DOI: 10.1038/srep31188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Malachite coating for the Statue of Liberty model.
(a) The acrylic paint containing malachite together with different commercial acrylic paints. (b) The actual Statue of Liberty in New York City (taken by Dr. Youxi Lin from Stony Brook University, New York). (c) Whole process in computer simulation. (d) The 1:600 models fabricated using the acrylic paint containing malachite and the models after the laser treatment.
Figure 2Selective laser patterning on the acrylic paint containing malachite.
(a) One part of a 3D printed robot hand was brush-coated with the acrylic paint containing malachite. (b) Laser writing tracks for patterning the interconnection circuits on the acrylic paint containing malachite. (c) Assembly and testing of the synthesized circuits for powering up blue LEDs. (d) The robot hand with on-chip batteries, red LEDs and microprocessors using malachite coating and laser patterning.
Figure 3DFT results and molecular structures.
(a) The calculated optical absorption coefficient according to different incident photon energies. (b) Density of states of malachite calculated using spin-dependent density functional theory. (c) The pristine malachite molecular structure. (d) The bond-broken malachite molecule structure after 405 nm laser treatment. (e) The photochemically synthesized copper with an fcc crystalline structure. (f) The notion of the individual element for the above illustration figures.
Figure 4XRD of the acrylic paint containing malachite (a) before laser treatment, (b) after laser treatment, (c) and according to different laser writing speeds. (d) Resistivity according to different writing speeds. SEM plan-view images of the surface of acrylic paint containing malachite (e) before and (f) after laser treatment.