Hybrid Printing of Conductive Traces from Bulk Metal for Digital Signals in Intelligent Devices

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Abstract

In this article, we explore multi-material additive manufacturing (MMAM) for conductive trace printing using molten metal microdroplets on polymer substrates to enhance digital signal transmission. Investigating microdroplet spread informs design rules for adjacent trace printing. We studied the effects of print distance on trace morphology and resolution, noting that printing distance showed almost no change in the printed trace pitch. Crosstalk interference between adjacent signal traces was analyzed across frequencies and validated both experimentally and through simulation; no crosstalk was visible for printed traces at input frequencies below 600 kHz. Moreover, we demonstrate printed trace reliability against thermal shock, whereby no discontinuation in conductive traces was observed. Our findings establish design guidelines for MMAM electronics, advancing digital signal transmission capabilities.

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APA

Khan, Z., Saphala, A., Kartmann, S., Koltay, P., Zengerle, R., Amft, O., & Shu, Z. (2024). Hybrid Printing of Conductive Traces from Bulk Metal for Digital Signals in Intelligent Devices. Micromachines, 15(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15060750

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