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EEA Grants Norway Grants Ing. Marcela Králová Ph.D., CEITEC 21.4.2015 Comparison of three common deposition techniques: Spin-coating Dip-coating Material printing
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Principle of spin-coating Principle of dip-coating Different technique of material printing Advantage and disadvantage of material printing Applications Content
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Principle: Substrate is coated by ink Substrate is rotated (majority of the ink is flung off the side) Drying the substrate by airflow Creation of desired layers Principle of spin-coating
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Parameters: Thickness: nm – m Speed: more than 600 RPM (10 rotations per second) Ink: photoresist, insulator, organic, inorganic material Advantages: Quickly and easily produce uniform film Coating of small (mm) or large substrate (dm) Disadvantages: Low usage of materials (10%) Principle of spin-coating
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Principle: Dip a substrate into dip coating liquid Wait for a liquid surface to become the stationary state Raise the substrate up perpendicularly Control film thickness Principle of dip-coating
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Parameters: Thickness increases with withdrawal speed Depends on viscosity, density and surface tension of liquid Advantages: Easy and simple maintenance Lower loss of coat liquid than in spin-coating Disadvantages: Deposition of both sides Precise control and clean environment Principle of dip-coating
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Material printing Classical Digital Offset Gravure Screen Electro- graphy Electro- graphy Ink-jet Relief
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Principle: Applying dampening solutin on the printing plate Applying ink on the printing plate Ink transfer from printing plate to the blanket cylinder Ink transfer from blanket cylinder to substrate Offset printing
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Printing plate (printing and non-printing areas in same level) Printing areas – hydrophobic Non-printing areas – hydrophilic Dampening solution – water + additives Offset printing
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Ink transfer is affected by: The thickness of ink layer on the printing plate The period of contact (printing speed and geometry of the printing components) The printing pressure The rheological properties of ink The temperature (on rheological properties) The surface properties (wettability, absorbency, roughness…) Offset printing
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possible construction Three transfer cylinders Possible reverse printing Three cylinder units Diameter of impression cylinder is same with others
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Offset printing possible construction One transfer cylinder Impossible reverse printing Three cylinder units Diameter of impression cylinder 2x than the other
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Offset printing possible construction One transfer cylinder Impossible reverse printing Five cylinder units Diameter of impression cylinder 4x than the other
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Principle: Printing plate is inked and flooded with ink Ink is removed by a wiper of blade Transport of ink onto the substrate Image elements are engraved into the surface of the cylinder Non-image areas – at constant level High printing pressure Adhesive forces between printing substrate and ink Gravure printing
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Ink transfer is affected by: The wetting properties of the printing substrate The surface properties of the materials involved The properties of the substrate The viscosity of the ink The printing pressure The printing speed The shape of the cells and their filling level Gravure printing
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Principle: Printing elements are coated with ink (constant thickness) Transfer ink onto the substrate Printing elements are raised above the non printing elements Book printing Flexographic printing Letterset Relief - Letterpress
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Ink transfer is affected by: The thickness of ink layer on the printing plate The period of contact (printing speed and geometry of the printing components) The printing pressure The rheological properties of ink The temperature (on rheological properties) The surface properties (wettability, absorbency, roughness…) Relief - Letterpress
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The oldest printing technique (Gutenberg) Two cylinders system and direct printing (unreadable text) Raised printing elements (40 – 400 m; selectivity of ink transfer) Plate is hard and uncompressible High pressure (MPa) Highly viscous, pasty ink Smooth substrate Letterpress - Book printing
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Letterpress – Book printing
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Disadvantage (comparison with offset) Expensive printing plate Costly preparation of the printing plate Limited print quality Limit of production speed Letterpress – Book printing
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Operation for the creating of printing plate Removal of the protective film Exposure through a negative film Washing of non-crosslinking photopolymer Drying of print relief Complete polymerization of the print relief Letterpress – Book printing
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Known from 1950 (previously as aniline printing) Soft, flexible elements Low pressure Ink with low viscosity (possible to print on a wide range of absorbent and non-absorbent substrates) Substrate (rough surface) Letterpress – flexographic printing
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Principle: Ink transfer to anilox roller Ink transfer from anilox roller to printing plate Ink transfer onto the substrate Letterpress – flexographic printing
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Disadvantage (comparison with offset): Quality is lower 48 lines/cm (flexography) 60-120 lines/cm (offset) Letterpress – flexographic printing offset flexography
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Principle: Ink transferred to an intermediate cylinder covered with the blanket Ink transfer from intermediate cylinder to substrate Indirect process as well as offset Letterpress – lettreset
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Push-through process (special type of stencil printing) Stencil is fastened onto the surface Ink can be applied with a brush or squeegee with a spraygun or an airbrush Different substrates and inks Disadvantage: Part must to be connected Screen printing
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Spread of ink by a squeegee (without pressure) Ink is pressed through the plate with a higher pressure Separation of plate and substrate Ink is drawn out of the screen mesh Applications (artistic, large-scale,…) 3 methods: Flat to flat Flat to round Round to round Screen printing
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Flat to flat: Flat printing plate Flat printing substrate
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Screen printing Flat to round: Flat printing plate Round printing substrate Printing plate and impression cylinder move in one direction Printing on cans, balls…
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Screen printing Round to round: Round printing plate Round substrate Synchronized movement
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Non-impact printing technology Ink is sprayed from nozzle Imaging is done directly onto the substrate Characteristics: Droplet volume: 2–160 pL Spatial frequency of droplets adjusting: 70-2500 dpi Temporal frequency of droplets formation: dozens – hundred kHz Printing of whole surface: Stationary nozzles and substrate movement Nozzle movement across the substrate and simultaneously substrate movement Ink-jet printing
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Ink-jet printing - inks
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Binary deflection (two charges) Uncharged droplets (reach the paper paper) Charged drops(deflected and fed to a collection device ) Drop size and interval depend on: Nozzle diameter Viscosity and surface tension of ink Frequency of excitation The quality depends on: Quality and continuity of drop stream Parameters: Frequency (1 MHz) Drop size (4 pL) Drop diameter (20 L) Drop speed (40 m/s) Ink-jet printing-continuous
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Multi deflection (different charge) Different intensity of charge – different deflection Jet can be deflected in 16 positions Height of tha written line depends on the distance between ink jet head and the paper surface Resolution is reduced with increasing writting height Resolution is determined by Speed of the substrate Drop frequency Maximum resolution is 7 x 6 dots (h x w) Ink-jet printing-continuous
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Thermal ink-jet process (bubble jet) Ink-jet printing-drop on demand
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Time sequence for drop formation
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Thermal ink-jet process (bubble jet) Parameters: Drop volume: 23 pL Drop diameter: 35 m Drop frequency: 5-8 kHz Resulition: 600 dpi Ink-jet printing-drop on demand
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Piezo ink-jet process (mechanical displacement) Ink-jet printing-drop on demand
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Rear wall Channel wall
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Electrostatic ink-jet process Ink-jet printing-drop on demand
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Drop formation Drop generation
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Comparison SpinDipInkjet Precursor use efficiency 95% wasted 5% wasted Coated areacmdm (m) Sensitivity to surface defects high low Possibility of patterningnone unlimited
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Office printer Since 2005: Epson printers Modified CD holder Experimental printer Since 2009: Inkjet deposition printer Fujifilm Dimatix Applications
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Example of printed structure Photocatalysts layers patterns Sensors electrodes + active layers Solar cells Applications
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Liquid precursor Substrate: glass or pyrex plates Applications - office printer
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Liquid precursor Substrate: glass, pyrex plates, foils, Applications - experimental printer
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Thank you for your attention This project is funded by the Norwegian Financial Mechanism. Registration number: NF-CZ07-ICP-1-040-2014. Name of the project: „Formation of research surrounding for young researchers in the field of advanced materials for catalysis and bioapplications“
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