Issue 15, 2015

Expeditious low-temperature sintering of copper nanoparticles with thin defective carbon shells

Abstract

The realization of air-stable nanoparticles, well-formulated nanoinks, and conductive patterns based on copper is a great challenge in low-cost and large-area flexible printed electronics. This work reports the synthesis of a conductively interconnected copper structure via thermal sintering of copper inks at a low temperature for a short period of time, with the help of thin defective carbon shells coated onto the copper nanoparticles. Air-stable copper/carbon core/shell nanoparticles (typical size ∼23 nm, shell thickness ∼1.0 nm) are prepared by means of an electric explosion of wires. Gaseous oxidation of the carbon shells with a defective structure occurs at 180 °C, impacting the choice of organic solvents as well as the sintering conditions to create a crucial neck formation. Isothermal oxidation and reduction treatment at 200 °C for only about 10 min yields an oxide-free copper network structure with an electrical resistivity of 25.1 μΩ cm (14.0 μΩ cm at 250 °C). Finally, conductive copper line patterns are achieved down to a 50 μm width with an excellent printing resolution (standard deviation ∼4.0%) onto a polyimide substrate using screen printing of the optimized inks.

Graphical abstract: Expeditious low-temperature sintering of copper nanoparticles with thin defective carbon shells

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Feb 2015
Accepted
14 Mar 2015
First published
16 Mar 2015

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 6627-6635

Expeditious low-temperature sintering of copper nanoparticles with thin defective carbon shells

C. Kim, G. Lee, C. Rhee and M. Lee, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 6627 DOI: 10.1039/C5NR00956A

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