| Literature DB >> 35629675 |
Sandra Lepak-Kuc1, Katarzyna Wasilewska1,2, Daniel Janczak1, Tatiana Nowicka1,2, Małgorzata Jakubowska1,3.
Abstract
In this study, the extremely important and difficult topic of flexographic printing on a heat-shrinkable substrate was taken up. Six commercially available, electrically conductive inks based on silver, copper and graphite nanoparticles were selected and tested upon their applicability for printing on the temperature-sensitive PET material. As a printing substrate, the one-direction heat-shrinkable PET film, with a maximum shrinkage of 78%, was selected. All of the examined inks were subjected to the printing process throughout three different anilox line screens. The tested inks, along with the electric paths printed with them, were subjected to various tests. The main parameters were evaluated, such as printability combined with the rheology tests and ink adhesion to the examined PET substrate together with the electrical conductivity before and after the shrinkage.Entities:
Keywords: conductive inks; printed electronic; shrink sleeve labels; shrinkable PET film
Year: 2022 PMID: 35629675 PMCID: PMC9142902 DOI: 10.3390/ma15103649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Tested conductive inks.
| Ink | Commercial Name | Supplier | Conductive Particles | Solids Content [%] | Solvent | Sheet Resistivity (According to TDS) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | Bectron 6671 | Elantas | silver | 98 | acrylic resin | <30 mΩ/sq/mil |
| S2 | Bectron 6680 | Elantas | silver | 77 | solvent based | <25 mΩ/sq/mil |
| C1 | LF-350 | Copprint | copper | 85 | solvent based | <0.004 Ω/sq/25 µm |
| S3 | AFT6700 | Sun Chemical | silver | >50 | water based | <15 mΩ/sq/mil |
| G1 | GFT4600 | Sun Chemical | graphite | Data not available | water based | <100 Ω/sq |
| S4 | ECI1011 | Henkel | silver | 75.6 | solvent based | <0.005 Ω/sq/25 µm |
Aniloxes used for printing.
| Anilox Line Screen [L/cm] | Anilox Capacity [cm3/m2] |
|---|---|
| 80 | 9 |
| 140 | 12 |
| 40 | 25 |
Figure 1Scheme illustrating the stages of the preparation of the conductive paths on the shrinkable substrate.
Figure 2The viscosity of the tested inks.
The sheet resistance of printed conductive inks.
| Ink | Sheet Resistance [Ω/sq] | Standard Deviations |
|---|---|---|
| S1 | 5.18 | 0.48 |
| S2 | 0.32 | 0.07 |
| S3 | 2.65 | 0.35 |
| G1 | 45.3 | 4.28 |
| S4 | No conductivity properties | - |
| C1 | No conductivity properties | - |
Figure 3Microscope pictures of printed paths using (a) S2, (b) S1, (c) C1 (d) S3 (e) G1, (f) S4 inks.
The adhesion of the layers printed with the usage of tested inks (1—good adhesion, 2—medium adhesion 3—poor adhesion).
| Tested Ink | Adhesion of the Print |
|---|---|
| S1 | 2 |
| S2 | 1 |
| S3 | 3 |
| G1 | 3 |
| S4 | 2 |
| C1 | 1 |
Figure 4A picture of the layers subjected to the Tessa Tape adhesion test for (a) S1, (b) S2, (c) S3, (d) G1, (e) S4 and (f) C1 inks. The test was conducted on the straight layer at the top of the printed pattern.
Figure 5The sheet resistance of shrunken samples; whiskers indicate the standard deviation.
Figure 6Images from the optical (a,d) and from the scanning electron (b,c,e,f) microscopes of the conductive path from S2 ink after shrinking by the hot air process (a–c) and by the steam process (d–f).
Figure 7NFC antenna printed on shrink sleeve label applied on the container.