Coffee stains inspire new printing technique

Have you ever spilled your coffee on your desk? You may then have observed one of the most puzzling phenomena of fluid mechanics - the coffee-ring effect. Coffee rings form because the liquid evaporates quicker at the edges, causing an accumulation of solid particles that results in the characteristic dark ring. Inks behave like coffee - particles in the ink accumulate around the edges creating irregular shapes and uneven surfaces, especially when printing on hard surfaces like silicon wafers or plastics. This effect has hindered the development of functional inks that can be used on graphene, 2D materials, and nanoparticles because it makes printed electronic devices behave irregularly. Printing of electronics Now, a team of researchers from Cambridge, Durham, and Beihang Universities have created a new family of inks that overcomes this problem, enabling the cheap industrial-scale manufacture of electronics such as sensors, light detectors, batteries and solar cells in large numbers, using inkjet technology. Using the new inks, the team printed 4,500 nearly identical devices on a silicon wafer and plastic substrate. Gas sensors and photodetectors were printed with very little variations in performance.
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