Abstract

The increase of electrical resistance during the strain-controlled bending fatigue of 2 μm-thick inkjet-printed or vacuum deposited metallic films (Cu, Ag) on flexible substrates (BT: Bismaleimide Triazine, PI: Polyimide) was investigated. Electrical resistance increased with an increase in the number of fatigue cycles. The rate of increase in the electrical resistance of inkjet-printed Cu films was lower than that of thermally evaporated films. This phenomenon is attributable to the porous microstructure of inkjet-printed Cu films. The porous structure contains a lot of free volume and a large area of free surface, which can be a sinking site for vacancies formed during the cyclic deformation. It was confirmed that a smaller grain size leads to a lower rate of increase in the electrical resistance, which was ascribed to the easy vacancy annihilation due to a short diffusion length of the vacancy to the grain boundary which is a vacancy sinking site. The rate of increase in the electrical resistance was also influenced by the grain boundary geometry. The lower rate of the evaporated Ag film on a BT substrate was attributed to the crack-like grain boundaries, which were expected to behave like pores.

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