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Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology

Miles Morgan, Daniel Curtis Orcid Logo, Davide Deganello Orcid Logo

Organic Electronics, Volume: 73, Pages: 212 - 218

Swansea University Authors: Miles Morgan, Daniel Curtis Orcid Logo, Davide Deganello Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Functional model inks were formulated and printed using flexography in order to assess the influence of ink extensional elasticity and print velocity on the morphological and electrical properties of printed layers. Increased extensional elasticity and higher print velocity resulted in the printing...

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Published in: Organic Electronics
ISSN: 1566-1199
Published: 2019
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa50502
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first_indexed 2019-06-05T11:07:39Z
last_indexed 2023-02-22T03:58:15Z
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spelling 2023-02-21T16:16:21.6408289 v2 50502 2019-05-23 Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology 74c1257d35ba8de6402ca451aab305a1 Miles Morgan Miles Morgan true false e76ff28a23af2fe37099c4e9a24c1e58 0000-0002-6955-0524 Daniel Curtis Daniel Curtis true false ea38a0040bdfd3875506189e3629b32a 0000-0001-8341-4177 Davide Deganello Davide Deganello true false 2019-05-23 CHEG Functional model inks were formulated and printed using flexography in order to assess the influence of ink extensional elasticity and print velocity on the morphological and electrical properties of printed layers. Increased extensional elasticity and higher print velocity resulted in the printing of more isotropic prints, both morphologically and electronically. Furthermore, a correlation between the prints’ morphological and electrical anisotropy strongly suggests that print uniformity has a considerable influence on functionality and that ink rheology may be used to control such characteristics. Journal Article Organic Electronics 73 212 218 1566-1199 Flexography; Rheology; Printed electronics; Extensional flow; Elasticity 31 10 2019 2019-10-31 10.1016/j.orgel.2019.05.027 COLLEGE NANME Chemical Engineering COLLEGE CODE CHEG Swansea University 2023-02-21T16:16:21.6408289 2019-05-23T11:52:47.0560485 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering Miles Morgan 1 Daniel Curtis 0000-0002-6955-0524 2 Davide Deganello 0000-0001-8341-4177 3 0050502-04072019111015.pdf morgan2019(2).pdf 2019-07-04T11:10:15.1470000 Output 1938035 application/pdf Version of Record true 2019-07-04T00:00:00.0000000 Distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY-4.0) true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
spellingShingle Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
Miles Morgan
Daniel Curtis
Davide Deganello
title_short Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
title_full Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
title_fullStr Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
title_full_unstemmed Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
title_sort Control of morphological and electrical properties of flexographic printed electronics through tailored ink rheology
author_id_str_mv 74c1257d35ba8de6402ca451aab305a1
e76ff28a23af2fe37099c4e9a24c1e58
ea38a0040bdfd3875506189e3629b32a
author_id_fullname_str_mv 74c1257d35ba8de6402ca451aab305a1_***_Miles Morgan
e76ff28a23af2fe37099c4e9a24c1e58_***_Daniel Curtis
ea38a0040bdfd3875506189e3629b32a_***_Davide Deganello
author Miles Morgan
Daniel Curtis
Davide Deganello
author2 Miles Morgan
Daniel Curtis
Davide Deganello
format Journal article
container_title Organic Electronics
container_volume 73
container_start_page 212
publishDate 2019
institution Swansea University
issn 1566-1199
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.orgel.2019.05.027
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
department_str School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering
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description Functional model inks were formulated and printed using flexography in order to assess the influence of ink extensional elasticity and print velocity on the morphological and electrical properties of printed layers. Increased extensional elasticity and higher print velocity resulted in the printing of more isotropic prints, both morphologically and electronically. Furthermore, a correlation between the prints’ morphological and electrical anisotropy strongly suggests that print uniformity has a considerable influence on functionality and that ink rheology may be used to control such characteristics.
published_date 2019-10-31T04:01:58Z
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score 11.01628