Abstract

Thin films of a tailor-made photodecomposible aryltriazene polymer were applied in a modified laser-induced forward transfer (LIFT) process as sacrificial release layers. The photopolymer film acts as an intermediate energy-absorbing dynamic release layer (DRL) that decomposes efficiently into small volatile fragments upon UV laser irradiation. A fast-expanding pressure jet is generated which is used to propel an overlying transfer material from the source target onto a receiver. This DRL-assisted laser direct-write process allows the precise deposition of intact material pixels with micrometer resolution and by single laser pulses. Triazene-based photopolymer DRL donor systems were studied to derive optimum conditions for film thickness and laser fluences necessary for a defined transfer process at the emission wavelength of a XeCl excimer laser (308 nm). Photoablation, surface detachment, delamination and transfer behavior of aryltriazene polymer films with a thickness from 25 nm to ∼400 nm were investigated in order to improve the process control parameters for the fabrication of functional thin-film devices of microdeposited heat- and UV-sensitive materials.

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