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Nanotube Ink: Desktop Printing of
Carbon Nanotube Patterns
Using an off-the-shelf inkjet printer,
a team of scientists has developed a simple technique
for printing patterns of carbon nanotubes on paper and
plastic surfaces. The method, which is described in
the August 2006 issue of the journal Small, could lead
to a new process for manufacturing a wide range of nanotube-based
devices, from flexible electronics and conducting fabrics
to sensors for detecting chemical agents.
Carbon nanotubes have enticed researchers since their
discovery in 1991, offering an impressive combination
of high strength, low weight, and excellent conductivity.
But most current techniques to make nanotube-based devices
require complex and expensive equipment. “Our
results suggest new alternatives for fabricating nanotube
patterns by simply printing the dissolved particles
on paper or plastic surfaces,” said Robert Vajtai,
a researcher with the Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and corresponding
author of the paper.
Vajtai and his colleagues at Rensselaer — along
with a group of researchers led by Krisztián
Kordás and Géza Tóth at the University
of Oulu in Finland — have developed an approach
that uses a commercial inkjet printer to deposit nanotubes
onto various surfaces. They simply fill a conventional
ink cartridge with a solution of carbon nanotubes dissolved
in water, and then the printer produces a pattern just
as if it was printing with normal ink. Because nanotubes
are good conductors, the resulting images also are able
to conduct electricity.
Electrically conductive
image of Albert Einstein printed on copier paper with
carbon nanotube ink. (University of Oulu/K. Kordas and
G. Toth)
“Printed carbon nanotube structures
could be useful in many ways,” Vajtai said. “Some
potential applications based on their electrical conductivity
include flexible electronics for displays, antennas,
and batteries that can be integrated into paper or cloth.”
Printing electronics on cloth could allow people to
actually “wear” the battery for their laptop
computer or the entire electronic system for their cell
phone, according to Vajtai.
The technique could be used to print optical tags on
money and other paper items that need to be tracked,
and it could even lead to an electronic newspaper where
the text can be switched without changing the paper,
he said. The researchers printed different samples,
some of which show sensitivity to the vapors of several
chemicals, which also could make them useful as gas
sensors.
The approach is simple, versatile, and inexpensive,
which makes it superior to other methods for producing
conductive surfaces, according to Vajtai. “A great
advantage of our process is that the printed patterns
do not require curing, which is known to be a limiting
factor for conventional conductive ink applications,”
he said. “And since our ink is a simple water-based
dispersion of nanotubes, it is environmentally friendly
and easy to handle and store.”
Because the process uses off-the-shelf printers, cartridges,
and paper or plastic surfaces, the only real expense
is the cost of the nanotubes. For this experiment, the
researchers made their own multi-walled carbon nanotubes,
which were then chemically modified to allow them to
dissolve in water. But similar nanotubes can be purchased
for as little as a tenth of the price of the more expensive
single-walled variety of carbon nanotubes, Vajtai said.
And the cost of nanotubes should continue to drop as
commercial demand for higher volumes grows.
The researchers plan to continue optimizing the process
to improve the quality of the nanotube ink and the conductivity
of the printed images. At present, the paper or plastic
must be run through the printer multiple times to get
an electrically conductive pattern, with the conductivity
increasing after each repetition. They also hope to
experiment with different chemical modifications to
produce a diversity of ink “colors,” each
producing surface patterns with different properties,
Vajtai said.
Several other Rensselaer researchers collaborated with
Vajtai on the project: Pulickel Ajayan, the Henry Burlage
Professor of Materials Science and Engineering; Swastik
Kar, a postdoctoral research associate in materials
science and engineering; Saikat Talapatra, a postdoctoral
research associate with the Rensselaer Nanotechnology
Center; and Caterina Soldano, a doctoral student in
physics, applied physics, and astronomy. From the University
of Oulu, Tero Mustonen, Heli Jantunen, and Marja Lajunen
also contributed to the research.
Visit www.rpi.edu

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