| Literature DB >> 30135357 |
Sewoong Park1, Jinhyeong Kwon2, Jaemook Lim3, Wooseop Shin4, Younggeun Lee5, Habeom Lee6, Hyun-Jong Kim7, Seungyong Han8, Junyeob Yeo9, Seung Hwan Ko10,11, Sukjoon Hong12.
Abstract
Selective laser sintering of metal nanoparticle ink is a low-temperature and non-vacuum technique developed for the fabrication of patterned metal layer on arbitrary substrates, but its application to a metal layer composed of large metal area with small voids is very much limited due to the increase in scanning time proportional to the metal pattern density. For the facile manufacturing of such metal layer, we introduce micropatterning of metal nanoparticle ink based on laser-induced thermocapillary flow as a complementary process to the previous selective laser sintering process for metal nanoparticle ink. By harnessing the shear flow of the solvent at large temperature gradient, the metal nanoparticles are selectively pushed away from the scanning path to create metal nanoparticle free trenches. These trenches are confirmed to be stable even after the complete process owing to the presence of the accompanying ridges as well as the bump created along the scanning path. As a representative example of a metal layer with large metal area and small voids, dark-field photomask with Alphabetic letters are firstly created by the proposed method and it is then demonstrated that the corresponding letters can be successfully reproduced on the screen by an achromatic lens.Entities:
Keywords: laser-induced thermocapillary flow; metal nanoparticle ink; selective laser sintering
Year: 2018 PMID: 30135357 PMCID: PMC6165030 DOI: 10.3390/nano8090645
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Schematics of the proposed laser micropatterning for Ag NP ink; (b) The process flow of (i) the previous studies on SLS process for Ag NP ink and (ii) the proposed method.
Figure 2Transmission optical microscope images at (a–c) low magnification and (d–f) high magnification immediately after the laser scanning procedure on the Ag NP layer prepared at different spin-coating duration of (a,d) 1800 s (b,e) 300 s and (c,f) 60 s. The rotation speed has been fixed to be 500 rpm in every case.
Figure 3Combinatorial study for optimum laser power vs laser scanning speed. (a) Transmission optical microscope images of the Ag NP layer after conducting the laser scanning at 0.1 ~ 0.3 W laser power and 0.1 ~ 10 mm/s scanning speed; (b) Reflection optical microscope image of the Ag NP layer (i) immediately after scanned at 0.3 W laser power and 1 mm/s and (ii) after stored in the ambient condition for 10 min.
Figure 4(a) Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM); (b) Energy Dispersive X-ray (EDX) and (c) Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) measurement of the Ag NP layer which is cleaned with toluene immediately after the scanning process. The inset of (a) corresponds to its transmission optical microscope image. The 3D height profile in (c) is drawn at the scale of X:Y:Z = 1:1:30. The graph in (c) shows the height profile along the line perpendicular to the scanning path.
Figure 5(a) Schematics for the optical setting for the reproduction of the void pattern created on the Ag NP layer by the proposed technique. (f = 100 mm, D1 = 150 mm, D2 = 300 mm); (b) Photographs of the Alphabetic letters (‘O’, ‘N’ and ‘L’) reproduced on the screen.