Abstract
Manufacturing of copper micro-patterns is crucial in electronics for its utilization as high conductivity transparent conductive films (TCFs) and circuits. In the preparation process of current TCFs, a plethora of materials have emerged that can replace traditional indium tin oxide (ITO). However, even for the most promising metal-based nanowire materials, there are issues such as high cost, complex welding, and high contact resistance. To address these problems, this paper proposes a printable and filament-drawable polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based adhesive, which, through a novel additive patterning technology, efficiently and economically manufactures self-welding copper micro-meshes and circuits. The adhesive can be processed into micro-patterns through printing and filament drawing, on which ionic Ag can be in situ reduced and anchored, thereby eliminating the need for tedious pre- and post-treatment steps. The fully exposed Ag particles dramatically minimize the usage of precious metal catalyst, thus efficiently catalyzing electroless copper deposition (ECD) reaction. Highly conductive (1.03 × 107 S m−1) copper circuits can be fabricated on the printed adhesive patterns, exhibiting versatile applicability to diverse substrates. Highly precise copper micro-meshes (∼50 μm) can be fabricated on the filament networks drawn by the adhesive. The copper meshes undergo complete self-welding at junctions during the ECD process, thus exhibiting ultra-low square resistance of 0.45 Ω sq−1 while maintaining a high transmittance of 82.2 %. This is far superior to most of TCFs in published literature.
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