Novel Materials and Printing Technology for Flexible Electronics

Flexible electronics featured by bendability and/or stretchability enable unconventional applications such as wearable devices and implantable biosensors, etc. Current methods of fabricating flexible electronics usually require vacuum, high temperature, and multistep processes. Our group has explored a facile approach for fabrication of flexible electronics at room temperature, which is enabled by photoreactive inks combined with a light projection printing technique.

Such approach is based on two of our recent findings: 1) photosensitive metal reactive inks permit the room-temperature deposition of metal nanoparticle layers onto flexible substrates; and 2) highly electrically conductive metal patterns can be printed facilely by irradiating the inks with light projected from the digital light processing (DLP) system.

Photochemical reaction mechanism in the printing system
Photos of printed conductive patterns
Schematics of the DLP printing process
Properties of the printed structures

Representative Publications:

Wang X, Cui K, Xuan Q, Zhu C, Zhao N, Xu J. Blue Laser Projection Printing of Conductive Complex 2D and 3D Metallic Structures from Photosensitive Precursors[J]. ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 2019, 11: 21668–21674.