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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

In Situ Arsenic Speciation using Surface-enhanced Raman Spectroscopy

Yang, Mingwei 30 June 2017 (has links)
Arsenic (As) undergoes extensive metabolism in biological systems involving numerous metabolites with varying toxicities. It is important to obtain reliable information on arsenic speciation for understanding toxicity and relevant modes of action. Currently, popular arsenic speciation techniques, such as chromatographic/electrophoretic separation following extraction of biological samples, may induce the alternation of arsenic species during sample preparation. The present study was aimed to develop novel arsenic speciation methods for biological matrices using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS), which, as a rapid and non-destructive photon scattering technique. The use of silver nanoparticles with different surface coating molecules as SERS substrates permits the measurement of four common arsenicals, including arsenite (AsIII), arsenate (AsV), monomethylarsonic acid (MMAV) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMAV). This speciation was successfully carried out using positively charged nanoparticles, and simultaneous detection of arsenicals was achieved. Secondly, arsenic speciation using coffee ring effect-based separation and SERS detection was explored on a silver nanofilm (AgNF), which was prepared by close packing of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) on a glass substrate surface. Although arsenic separation using the conventional coffee ring effect is difficult because of the limited migration distance, a halo coffee ring was successfully developed through addition of surfactants, and was shown to be capable of arsenicals separation. The surfactants introduced in the sample solution reduce the surface tension of the droplet and generate strong capillary action. Consequently, solvent in the droplet migrated into the peripheral regions and the solvated arsenicals to migrated varying distances due to their differential affinity to AgNF, resulting in a separation of arsenicals in the peripheral region of the coffee ring. Finaly, a method combining experimental Raman spectra measurements and theoretical Raman spectra simulations was developed and employed to obtain Raman spectra of important and emerging arsenic metabolites. These arsenicals include monomethylarsonous acid (MMAIII), dimethylarsinous acid (DMAIII), dimethylmonothioarinic acid (DMMTAV), dimethyldithioarsinic acid (DMDTAV), S-(Dimethylarsenic) cysteine (DMAIIICys) and dimethylarsinous glutathione (DMAIIIGS). The fingerprint vibrational frequencies obtained here for various arsenicals, some of which have not reported previously, provide valuable information for future SERS detection of arsenicals.
2

Convective Assembly of Rod-shaped Melanosome in Dilute Polymer Solution

Zhao, Jiuzhou 13 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
3

Inkjet etching of micro-via holes in thin polymer layers

Zhang, Yan January 2014 (has links)
Facilitated by the development of various direct-write techniques and functional polymeric materials including polymer based conductors and semiconductors, printed electronics are flourishing both commercially and as a research topic. This is not only because of their simpler manufacturing routes and lower cost, but also as a result of lower processing temperatures and better compatibility with flexible substrates, compared with conventional electronics. The development of conventional electronics has been guided by Moore s Law, the driver for which lies in the demand for electronic devices with better performance and portability at lower prices. Therefore, one can expect a similar trend for printed electronics to guide its development. Multi-layered printing can be adopted in printed electronics to achieve higher density integration, so that this development trend can be maintained. In such circumstances, creation of electrical connections between multiple layers emerges as an important issue for printed electronics. Inkjet-etched via holes are one potential solution to providing such electrical interconnections, and which can provide good integration with other inkjet-printed features simply by switching nozzles. This thesis aims to elicit a better understanding of the physics involved in inkjet etching and investigate the capability of the inkjet etching technique. In the thesis, the factors that can affect the size of via holes produced by inkjet etching are evaluated, which is significant for evaluating the capability of this technique to deliver industrially relevant features. Identified factors include droplet ejection frequency, droplet diameter, solvent properties and substrate temperature. Droplet ejection frequency, i.e. the reciprocal of the time interval between drops, determines the extent of evaporation of the solvent between two consecutive drop impacts. Droplet diameter determines the radius of the wetted area after the droplet I impacts on the surface and spreads into a sessile drop. Solvents with different evaporation properties result in different size evolution with the number of drops dispensed, as does droplet ejection frequency. Higher substrate temperatures can reduce the drop diameter during flight and decrease the evaporation time on polymer surfaces, which can shrink the size of via holes. Another important issue is achieving complete polymer penetration as residual polymer creates an electrical conduction barrier after such holes are subsequently filled with conductive materials or act as a barrier to filling by electroplating. Experiments have been carried out to test the effect of outer diameter and polymer thickness on polymer penetration. Electroplating is utilised to test the completeness of via hole penetration. A mechanism using the Marangoni effect to explain the protrusion drying pattern other than a hole in the polymer layer is proposed.
4

Effects of Marangoni Flows on Particle Transport and Deposition during Drop Evaporation

Lihui Wang (7040942) 16 August 2019 (has links)
<div>The evaporation of a liquid drop containing particles resting on a substrate have diverse industrial applications including inkjet printing, spray coating, fabrication of functional nanomaterials, disease diagnosis, among others. In addition to these wide ranging practical applications, the sessile drop evaporation can be observed in everyday life with dew drops, coffee spills, and the dry patterns of other beverages.</div><div><br></div><div>The self-assembly of particles during drop evaporation is a process that is affected by various factors, such as contact line (CL) behaviors, microfluidic flows, short-range interactions of particle-interface and particle-particle. Each of these factors are complicated enough to study, let alone the total effects on the process. The primary goal of this work is to investigate the influence of microfluidic flows and the particle-interface interaction, viz. the evaporation process was subject to a pinned CL and the particle-particle interaction was neglected under dilute particle concentration. </div><div>To accomplish this goal, the Galerkin/Finite Element Method (G/FEM) is used to solve for the flow, the temperature and the particle concentration profiles. </div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>The complexity of the problems comes from various surface phenomena, one of which is the surface tension. The surface tension brings capillary force in the normal direction and capillary flow toward the CL, which results in the well-known coffee-ring effect. Moreover, the surface tension changes with temperature, surfactant concentration, etc. resulting in Marangoni stresses in the tangential direction. The Marangoni stress on the surface leads to circulations of flow inside the drop and the circulation can be either clockwise or counterclockwise depending on the direction of the stress. </div><div><br></div><div>When the Marangoni stress is merely caused by temperature change, the circulation direction changes not only in time but also in space. At late stage of evaporation, i.e. with a small contact angle (CA), multi-circulation flow profiles emerge. This flow profiles are featured with stagnation points and transition points. The stagnation points can be further categorized into capillary-induced stagnation points and Marangoni-induced stagnation points. By introducing the concept of capillary-induced stagnation points, the simulations reached agreement with experiments in terms of the radial location of the observed stagnation points.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>The multi-circulation flow profiles implied regional segregation inside the drop. When a large circulation is observed in most part of the drop and a small circulation exists near the CL, particle concentrations are relatively uniform in each individual region but differs significantly across the two regions. Transition points are used to characterize the location of the regional segregation, which can be adjusted by Marangoni stress.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Marangoni circulations in different directions revealed distinct influences on particle distribution and deposition. First, while both directions facilitate even distribution of particles, a clockwise circulation strengthens CL accumulation for a small Marangoni stress. Second, a counterclockwise circulation with a small Marangoni stress impedes the deposition rate of particles, while a clockwise circulation facilities the deposition no matter how small the Marangoni stress is. This results is under a condition of a strong adsorption between particles and substrates. </div><div><br></div><div>The analysis and understanding of the above results are crucial to elucidating and controlling the final deposition patterns of particles. Thus, the focus of this research is to understand the combined effect of Marangoni stress and capillary flow on particle deposition during sessile drop evaporation.</div><div><br></div>
5

Inkjet printing of two dimensional materials

He, Pei January 2017 (has links)
Over the last decade, two dimensional (2D) materials have attracted considerable attention from both the scientific and engineering community due to their unique properties. One important advance of 2D materials is that they can be exfoliated into nanosheets suspended in a liquid phase and that this allows the formulation of 2D nanomaterials inks. Such inks can be deposited as functional components through low-cost inkjet printing techniques. Many 2D materials based inks have been produced over the years. This thesis investigates the use of inkjet printing to deposit 2D materials such as graphene oxide (GO) and black phosphorus (BP).GO, a derivative of graphene, has been widely used to produce graphene-based conductors via inkjet printing owing to its good stability in readily available solvents such as water. In this work, highly conductive reduced graphene oxide (rGO) films with bulk conductivity in excess of 2 × 10^4 Sm-1 have been prepared by inkjet printing a GO aqueous ink, with mean flake size 35.9 micro metre, through a 60 micro metre inkjet printing nozzle followed by a reduction step. Experimental results showed that individual GO flakes up to 200 micro metre diameter can be successfully printed with no instances of nozzle blocking or poor printing performance. The mechanism by which this occurs is believed to be GO sheet folding during drop formation followed by elastic unfolding during drop impact and spreading. In addition, the influence of GO flake size on rGO film conductivity has been investigated. It was found that the rGO film conductivity increased about 60% when the mean flake size of the GO flakes in the ink increases from 0.68 micro metre to 35.9 micro metre. The drying behaviour of printed GO droplets has been studied on eight GO aqueous inks in which the mean flake size of GO was varied over a range from 0.68 to 35.9 micro metre. It was found that the coffee ring effect (inhomogeneous drying of a droplet to leave a ring like deposit) of dried droplets of the GO ink weakened and disappeared when the flake size increasing. It was found that, with a printed deposit around 340 micro metre in diameter, the coffee ring effect (CRE) was suppressed with the mean flake size > 10.3 micro metre. The critical flake size for CRE suppression reduced to 5.97 and 3.68 micro metre when the substrate temperature was 40 and 50 °C, respectively. It was further found that the CRE weakened with decreasing printed drop size, with the critical flake size reducing to 1.58 micro metre with a printed drop diameter of 30 micro metre.The interaction between BP nanometre thickness flakes and humid atmospheres was investigated using an inkjet printed BP sensor. The BP sensor showed was very sensitive to changes in humidity with a response time of a few seconds and the effect is reproducible in minutes. However, long term exposure to humid air with a relative humidity (RH) > 11% leads to a significant chemical change in the BP films, with Fourier transform infra-red spectroscopy (FTIR) indicating partial hydrolysis of the BP to form phosphate and phosphonate ions. Low temperature heat treatment of BP films under dry conditions after exposure to elevated RH leads to a partial recovery of the impedance response and reversion to a chemical state similar to that before exposure to a humid environment. The recovery of BP properties is most complete after exposure to lower humidity environments (RH < 11%), although exact replication of the original impedance response and FTIR spectrum was not possible.
6

Évaporation de goutte sur substrat soluble / Droplets evaporation on soluble substrates

Mailleur, Alexandra 02 December 2016 (has links)
La compréhension des mécanismes pilotant la cinétique d'évaporation d'une gouttelette sessile sur un substrat inerte a notablement progressé ces dernières années. Ainsi, l'influence de l'angle de contact de la goutte, de la conductivité thermique du solide, de sa rugosité, de la convection thermocapillaire à l'intérieur de la goutte, ou de la convection dans la vapeur environnante, sont maintenant bien compris. Parallèlement, la façon dont des dépôts de type ‘tâche de café' se forment pendant l'évaporation de fluides complexes (suspension colloïdale, sang …) a été étudiée en détail.Toutes ces études ont été réalisées avec des solides non-réactifs. Nous proposons ici d'étudier le comportement d'une goutte d'eau s'évaporant sur un substrat soluble. Dans cette configuration, trois phénomènes sont en interaction complexe : la dissolution/précipitation du substrat à l'interface solide-liquide, la diffusion/convection des espèces dissoutes dans la gouttelette, l'évaporation de l'eau à l'interface liquide-air. Nous avons travaillé avec des solides à dissolution rapide, des monocristaux de NaCl et KCl, à température et humidité contrôlées. Pour tester l'influence des instabilités thermo- et soluto-gravitationnelles, nous avons réalisé des expériences au sol et en micropesanteur, lors de plusieurs campagnes de vols paraboliques CNES.Nous avons observé que la dissolution induisait un ancrage de la ligne triple au tout début de l'évaporation, conduisant à une décroissance linéaire de l'angle de contact avec le temps. A la fin de l'évaporation, un dépôt périphérique apparaît. Cette configuration permet ainsi de faire apparaître des dépôts de type ‘tâche de café' à partir d'une goutte d'eau pure. Ces dépôts sont la preuve d'un écoulement radial de l'intérieur vers l'extérieur au sein de la goutte. L'observation de gouttes ensemencées de particules fluorescentes s'évaporant sur un monocristal de sel a permis de mettre en évidence des écoulements capillaires complexes au sein de celle-ci. La morphologie des dépôts périphériques est très variée, passant continument de la forme de parois inclinées à celle de demi-tore creux, lorsque le volume initial de la goutte ou la température varient / Recent progresses have led to a better understanding of the mechanisms driving the evaporation kinetics of a sessile droplet of simple liquid on an inert substrate. For instance, the influence of the contact angle of the droplet, of the thermal conductivity of the solid, of its roughness, of the thermocapillary convection inside the droplet, or of the convection in the vapor are now better understood. Besides, the way coffee-stain-like deposits form during the evaporation of complex fluids (colloidal suspension, blood …) has now been studied in detail.All these studies have been carried out with non-reacting solids. We propose here the investigation of the behavior of a water droplet evaporating on a soluble substrate. In this configuration, three phenomena are strongly interacting: dissolution/precipitation of the substrate at the solid-liquid interface, diffusion/convection of the dissolved species in the droplet, evaporation of water at the liquid-air interface. We have worked with fast-dissolving solids, NaCl and KCl single crystals, with controlled temperature and humidity. To test the influence of thermogravitational instabilities, experiments on the ground and in microgravity (parabolic flights) have been carried out.We have observed that the dissolution induces a pinning of the triple line at the early beginning of the evaporation, leading to a decrease of the contact angle linear in time. At the end of the evaporation, a peripheral deposit (coffee-ring-like) resulting from the salt migration and precipitation, is always present, proof of an outward flow inside the droplet. The observation of drops seeded with fluorescent particles evaporating on a dissolving solid (NaCl single crystal) has highlighted complex capillary flows inside the liquid. The shape of this ring-like deposit is very diversified and vary with the substrate temperature and the initial volume of the droplet
7

Inkjet deposition of electrolyte : Towards Fully Printed Light-emitting Electrochemical Cells

Lindh, Mattias January 2013 (has links)
Organic electronics is a hot and modern topic which holds great promise for present and future applications. One such application is the light-emitting electrochemical cell (LEC). It can be fully solution processed and driven at low voltage providing light emission from a large surface. Inkjet printers available today can print a variety of inks, both solutions and dispersions. The technique is scalable and a quick and easy way to accurately deposit small quantities of material in user definable patterns onto a substrate. This is desirable to make low cost and efficient optical devices like displays. In this thesis it has been shown that solid electrolytes, after being dissolved in a liquid solvent, can be inkjet printed into a set of well separated distinct drops with an average maximum thickness of 150 nm. The electrolytes are commonly used in LECs and comprised by poly(ethylene glycol) with molar masses ranging from 1 – 35 kg/mol, and potassium trifluoromethanesulfonate (KCF3 SO3 )—together dissolved incyclohexanone to form an ink. The smallest achieved edge to edge distance between the printed drops was 40 μm. Together with a drop diameter of 50 μm it yields a coverage of 24% at a resolution of 280 dpi. Profiles of dried deposited drops of electrolyte were examined with a profilometer, which showed adistinct coffee ring effect on each drop. In particular, the ridges of the coffee rings were broken into pillar like shapes, together forming a structure akin to a scandinavian ancient remnant called stone ship. Different drop diameters were measured in and between the indium tin oxide samples. The drops’ speeds and sizes atejection from the nozzles seemed unchanged, and wettability is most probably the physical phenomena tolook into in order to understand what generates the differences. Local changes in surface roughness and/or surface energy, possibly originating from the cleaning process of the samples, is most likely the cause. No indications towards large differences in surface tension between the printable inks were seen, however their viscoelastic properties were not measured. As part of the thesis work a LEC characterization set-up was built. It drives a LEC at constant currentand measures the driving voltage, -current, and luminance over time. The set-up is controlled by a Labview virtual instrument and the data exported to a text-file for later analysis. The precision of the luminance measurements is ±0.1 cd/m2 for readings &lt; 50 cd/m2 , but the accuracy is uncertain. The conclusion of this thesis is that it is indeed possible to print solid electrolytes dissolved in cyclo-hexanone with an inkjet printer. However, in order to fully understand the spreading and drying of thedrops, studies of the inks’ viscoelastic properties, together with surface roughness and -energy density ofthe substrates, are needed. The largest molar mass of nicely printable poly(ethylene glycol), at an ink concentration of 10 mg/ml, was 35 kg/mol. This is comparable to the molar mass of an active light-emittingmaterial, “SuperYellow”, often used in LECs. Even though their respective molecular structures are very different, this indicates that inkjet printing of complete LEC-inks, containing both the active material and solid electrolyte, is feasible. Most probably it would require substantial tuning of the printing parameters. This thesis provides further hope for future fully inkjet printed LECs.
8

BIOMIMETIC NON-IRIDESCENT STRUCTURAL COLORATION VIA PHASE-SEPARATION OF COMPATIBILIZED POLYMER BLEND FILMS

Nallapaneni, Asritha 15 July 2020 (has links)
No description available.
9

Inkjet Printing of Colloidal Nanospheres

Sowade, Enrico, Blaudeck, Thomas, Baumann, Reinhard R. 12 November 2015 (has links) (PDF)
We report on inkjet printing of aqueous colloidal suspensions containing monodisperse silica and/or polystyrene nanosphere particles and a systematic study of the morphology of the deposits as a function of different parameters during inkjet printing and solvent evaporation. The colloidal suspensions act as a model ink for an understanding of layer formation processes and resulting morphologies in inkjet printing in general. We investigated the influence of the surface energy and the temperature of the substrate, the formulation of the suspensions, and the multi-pass printing aiming for layer stacks on the morphology of the deposits. We explain our findings with models of evaporation-driven self-assembly of the nanosphere particles in a liquid droplet and derive methods to direct the self-assembly processes into distinct one- and two-dimensional deposit morphologies.
10

Coffee-ring-effect based self-assembly mechanism for all-inkjet printed organic field effect transistors with micron-sized channel length

Bali, Chadha 12 February 2020 (has links)
Due to the increasing interest in low-cost, lightweight, and wearable technologies, flexible and printed electronics has become an intensive field of research during the last two decades. This research is mainly focused on the development of solution-processed organic materials, the evolution of diverse appropriate printing technologies and the enhancement of electronic device performance. Compared to conventional electronics, printed technologies allow for cheaper and easier processing but much poorer resolution, which results in comparatively large organic field effect transistor (OFET) channel lengths of a few ten microns. Reducing the channel length requires the use of additional methods such as wetting-based and non-printed approaches. The minimisation of the channel length is crucial in order to obtain higher frequencies and increasing currents. Therefore, overcoming the resolution limitation is one of the challenging topics in the field of printed electronics. In this thesis, a new approach for the realisation of fully inkjet-printed small-channel OFETs is investigated. For this purpose, a piezoelectric Drop-on-Demand (DOD) inkjet printer with 10 pl printheads is employed. This approach involves a self-aligned, dewetting-based technique for the reproducible fabrication of source and drain electrodes with homogeneous and well-controllable channel lengths down to 4 μm. For the realisation of these electrodes, a water-based, hydrophobic nanoparticle (NP) dispersion is initially printed and dried at room temperature in order to spontaneously form a thin hydrophobic twin-line of few microns due to the so-called coffee ring effect (CRE). This mechanism is responsible for the migration of the NPs from the center to the edge of the printed line during evaporation. An alcohol-based silver NP ink is subsequently printed on the hydrophobic lines and self-aligned to split into two separated source and drain electrodes. Dispersions with different materials such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and fluoroplastic NPs, different particle sizes and concentrations are evaluated in order to optimize the twin line deposition and the dewetting of the silver ink. Optimum dispersions are printed, then characterised on untreated polyethylene naphthalate (PEN) foils and oxygen plasma treated dielectrics such as cross-linked poly-4-vinylphenol (c-PVP) and cross-linked polymethyl methacrylate (c-PMMA). To evaluate the influencing parameters on the twin-line deposition, a model is developed for the calculation of the printed rivulet width and the electrode gap, which is determined by the width of the hydrophobic ring. These dimensions are investigated as functions of the printing parameters, NP concentration, line geometry, and wetting properties. Multiple simulations are used to determine the influence of each parameter on the twin-line deposition and calculate the critical channel length, below which the dewetting of the conductive ink on the hydrophobic line is no more possible. Based on the simulation results, the optimum parameters are used to control the gap between the printed source and drain electrodes. The underlying mechanism is finally employed for the realisation of fully inkjet-printed OFETs on plastic substrates with small channel lengths and a bottom gate bottom contact configuration (BGBC). For this purpose, a silver NP ink is used for the electrodes, a PTFE NP dispersion is printed on c-PVP and a small-molecule 6,13-Bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl)pentacene (TIPS-pentacene) solution is used for the semiconducting layer. Multiple small-channel OFET arrays are furthermore fabricated with a good reproducibility of the channel length and a high yield, which proves the industrial applicability of the proposed approach. / Die Integration kostengünstiger, leichter und tragbarer Technologien gewinnt zunehmend an Interesse. Dies führt kontinuierlich zu einer rasanten Zunahme der Forschungsaktivitäten im Bereich der flexiblen und gedruckten Elektronik. Der Fokus liegt hierbei überwiegend auf der Entwicklung organischer Materialien, Herstellung von geeigneten Druckverfahren und Verbesserung der Leistungsfähigkeit gedruckter elektronischer Bauteile. Ein ausschlaggebender Vorteil der gedruckten gegenüber der konventionellen Elektronik liegt darin, dass sie eine preiswerte und einfache Prozessierung ermöglicht. Die Beeinträchtigung dieser jungen Technologie ist immer noch die schwächere Auflösung, welche zur Erstellung von organischen Feldeffekttransistoren (OFETs) mit vergleichbar größeren Kanallängen von einigen zehn Mikrometern führt. Die Reduzierung der Kanallänge erfordert die Verwendung zusätzlicher Hilfsmethoden z.B. oberflächenspannungsstrukturiertes Drucken oder “non-printing”-Technologien. Die Minimierung der Kanallänge ist entscheidend, um höhere Frequenzen und Ströme zu erzielen. Daher ist die Optimierung der Auflösung ein wesentlicher Parameter, um die Technologie weiter zu entwickeln. Die vorliegende Arbeit stellt ein neu entwickeltes Verfahren zur Realisierung von All-Inkjet-gedruckten OFETs mit kleinen Kanallängen dar. Hierbei wird ein Drop- on-Demand (DOD) Inkjet-Drucker mit 10pl-Druckköpfen eingesetzt. Dieses Verfahren basiert auf einem oberflächenspannungsabhängigen Ansatz für die reproduzierbare Erstellung von Source- und Drainelektroden mit homogenen und kontrollierbaren Kanallängen bis 4 μm. Beim Erstellen dieser Elektroden wird zuerst eine wasserbasierte Dispersion mit hydrophoben Nanopartikeln gedruckt und bei Raumtemperatur getrocknet. Während der Trocknungsphase wird der sogenannte Kaffeeringeffekt (CRE) zu Nutze gemacht. So führt der CRE zur Migration der Nanopartikeln vom Zentrum bis zum Rand der gedruckten Struktur. Diese gerichtete Migration bewirkt eine spontane Erstellung einer dünnen hydrophoben Doppellinie mit einer Breite von nur wenigen Mikrometern. In einem weiteren Schritt wird eine alkoholbasierte Silbernanopartikeltinte über die hydrophobe Linie gedruckt. Aufgrund der niedrigen Oberflächenenergie der darunter befindlichen hydrophoben Linie, teilt sich die leitfähige Tinte in zwei voneinander getrennte Strukturen, die zunächst als Source- und Drainelektroden eingesetzt werden. Um dieses Verfahren zu optimieren, werden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit Dispersionen mit verschiedenen hydrophoben Materialien wie Teflon- oder fluoroplastische Nanopartikeln unterschiedlicher Partikelgrößen und Konzentrationen untersucht. Die optimale Dispersion wird darauffolgend auf unbehandelten PEN-Folien und sauerstoffplasmabehandelten Dielektrika wie vernetztem Poly-4-Vinylphenol (c- PVP) und vernetztem Polymethylmethacrylat (c-PMMA) gedruckt und anschließend charakterisiert. Um den Einfluss verschiedener Parameter auf dieses Verfahren zu evaluieren, wurde ein Modell für die Berechnung der Breiten der gedruckten Struktur und der getrockneten hydrophoben Doppellinie, die den Elektrodenabstand bestimmt, entwickelt. Diese Dimensionen werden in Abhängigkeit verschiedener Druckparameter, Nanopartikelkonzentrationen, Liniengeometrien und Benetzungseigenchaften untersucht. Zunächst werden Simulationen durchgeführt, um den Einfluss von jedem Parameter auf die Doppellinienentstehung zu bestimmen. Dieses Modell ist ebenfalls erforderlich für die Berechnung der kritischen Kanallänge, unter welcher keine Entnetzung der leitfähigen Tinte auf der hydrophoben Linie mehr möglich ist. Die gewonnenen Simulationsergebnisse bzw. die optimalen Parameter werden für die Kontrolle des Abstands zwischen den Source- und Drainelektroden beim Drucken eingesetzt. Das beschriebene Verfahren wird zur Realisierung von All-Inkjet-gedruckten OFETs mit kleinen Kanallängen auf Plastiksubstraten in einer Bottom-Gate-Bottom-Contact-Konfiguration (BGBC) verwendet. Die benutzten Materialien bestehen aus einer Silbernanopartikeltinte für die Source-, Drain- und Gateelektroden, c-PVP für das Dielektrikum und TIPS-Pentacen für den Halbleiter. Multiple OFET-Arrays werden zum Schluss mit hoher Reproduzierbarkeit der Kanallängen und hoher Ausbeute gedruckt, um die industrielle Anwendbarkeit des vorgestellten Verfahren zu zeigen.

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