New graphene printing technology can produce electronic circuits that are low-cost, flexible, highly conductive and water repellent, researchers report.
The nanotechnology “would lend enormous value to self-cleaning wearable/washable electronics that are resistant to stains, or ice and biofilm formation,” according to the new paper.
“We’re taking low-cost, inkjet-printed graphene and tuning it with a laser to make functional materials,” says Jonathan Claussen, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Iowa State University, an associate of the US Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory, and the corresponding author of the paper in the journal Nanoscale.
The wonder material
The paper describes how Claussen and the nanoengineers in his research group use inkjet printing technology to create electric circuits on flexible materials. In this case, the ink is flakes of graphene—the wonder material can be a great conductor of electricity and heat, plus it’s strong, stable, and biocompatible.
“The laser aligns the graphene flakes vertically—like little pyramids stacking up. And that’s what induces the hydrophobicity.”
The printed flakes, however, aren’t highly conductive and have to be processed to remove non-conductive binders and weld the flakes together, boosting conductivity and making them useful for electronics or sensors.
That post-print process typically involves heat or chemicals. But Claussen and his research group developed a rapid-pulse laser process that treats the graphene without damaging the printing surface—even if it’s paper.
And now they’ve found another application of their laser processing technology: taking graphene-printed circuits that can hold water droplets (they’re hydrophilic) and turning them into circuits that repel water (they’re superhydrophobic).
“We’re micro-patterning the surface of the inkjet-printed graphene,” Claussen says. “The laser aligns the graphene flakes vertically—like little pyramids stacking up. And that’s what induces the hydrophobicity.”
Claussen says the energy density of the laser processing can be adjusted to tune the degree of hydrophobicity and conductivity of the printed graphene circuits.
And that opens up all kinds of possibilities for new electronics and sensors, according to the paper.
Electronics everywhere
“One of the things we’d be interested in developing is anti-biofouling materials,” says paper coauthor Loreen Stromberg, an Iowa State postdoctoral research associate in mechanical engineering and at the Virtual Reality Applications Center.
As electronics shrink, add wrinkles to pillared graphene?
“This could eliminate the buildup of biological materials on the surface that would inhibit the optimal performance of devices such as chemical or biological sensors,” Stromberg says.
The technology could also have applications in flexible electronics, washable sensors in textiles, microfluidic technologies, drag reduction, de-icing, electrochemical sensors, and technology that uses graphene structures and electrical simulation to produce stem cells for nerve regeneration.
The researchers wrote that further studies should be done to better understand how the nano- and microsurfaces of the printed graphene creates the water-repelling capabilities.
The Iowa State University Research Foundation is working to patent the technology and has optioned it to an Ames-based startup, NanoSpy Inc., for possible commercialization. NanoSpy, located at the Iowa State University Research Park, is developing sensors to detect salmonella and other pathogens in food processing plants. Claussen and Stromberg are part of the company.
The graphene printing, processing, and tuning technology is turning out to be very useful, Stromberg says. After all, “electronics are being incorporated into everything.”
A bit of white graphene could give ceramics extra powers
Funding for the research came from grants from the National Science Foundation, the US Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust, plus Iowa State’s College of Engineering and department of mechanical engineering.
Source: Iowa State University