Inkjet Technology for Digital Fabrication

1. Auflage November 2012
390 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Kurzbeschreibung
This book provides a comprehensive overview on the use of inkjet printing for digital fabrication, with contributions from academic researchers and leading names in industry. Opening chapters cover the essential theory and principles involved in inkjet printing, while later chapters address current practice and problems. Filling a need for an up-to-date book covering recent research in inkjet developments, this work will be highly relevant to academic researchers in inkjet technology from disciplines such as chemistry, physics, engineering, materials science, and electronics, as well as technical development engineers and managers in industry.
Whilst inkjet technology is well-established on home and small office desktops and is now having increasing impact in commercial printing, it can also be used to deposit materials other than ink as individual droplets at a microscopic scale. This allows metals, ceramics, polymers and biological materials (including living cells) to be patterned on to substrates under precise digital control. This approach offers huge potential advantages for manufacturing, since inkjet methods can be used to generate structures and functions which cannot be attained in other ways.
Beginning with an overview of the fundamentals, this bookcovers the key components, for example piezoelectric print-heads and fluids for inkjet printing, and the processes involved. It goes on to describe specific applications, e.g. MEMS, printed circuits, active and passive electronics, biopolymers and living cells, and additive manufacturing. Detailed case studies are included on flat-panel OLED displays, RFID (radio-frequency identification) manufacturing and tissue engineering, while a comprehensive examination of the current technologies and future directions of inkjet technology completes the coverage.
With contributions from both academic researchers and leading names in the industry, Inkjet Technology for Digital Fabrication is a comprehensive resource for technical development engineers, researchers and students in inkjet technology and system development, and will also appeal to researchers in chemistry, physics, engineering, materials science and electronics.
List of Contributors xv
Preface xvii
1. Introduction to Inkjet Printing for Manufacturing 1
Ian M. Hutchings and Graham D. Martin
1.1 Introduction 1
1.2 Materials and Their Deposition by Inkjet Printing 3
1.3 Applications to Manufacturing 8
1.4 Potential and Limitations 15
References 17
2. Fundamentals of Inkjet Technology 21
Graham D. Martin and Ian M. Hutchings
2.1 Introduction 21
2.2 Surface Tension and Viscosity 23
2.3 Dimensionless Groups in Inkjet Printing 25
2.4 Methods of Drop Generation 27
2.5 Resolution and Print Quality 34
2.6 Grey-Scale Printing 35
2.7 Reliability 36
2.8 Satellite Drops 38
2.9 Print-Head and Substrate Motion 39
2.10 Inkjet Complexity 42
References 42
3. Dynamics of Piezoelectric Print-Heads 45
J. Frits Dijksman and Anke Pierik
3.1 Introduction 45
3.2 Basic Designs of Piezo-Driven Print-Heads 47
3.3 Basic Dynamics of a Piezo-Driven Inkjet Print-Head (Single-Degree-of-Freedom Analysis) 49
3.4 Design Considerations for Droplet Emission from Piezo-Driven Print-Heads 60
3.5 Multi-Cavity Helmholtz Resonator Theory 71
3.6 Long Duct Theory 77
3.7 Concluding Remarks 83
References 84
4. Fluids for Inkjet Printing 87
Stephen G. Yeates, Desheng Xu, Marie-Beatrice Madec, Dolores Caras-Quintero, Khalid A. Alamry, Andromachi Malandraki and Veronica Sanchez-Romaguera
4.1 Introduction 87
4.2 Print-Head Considerations 88
4.3 Physical Considerations in DOD Droplet Formation 89
4.4 Ink Design Considerations 95
4.5 Ink Classification 95
4.6 Applications in Electronic Devices 105
References 108
5. When the Drop Hits the Substrate 113
Jonathan Stringer and Brian Derby
5.1 Introduction 113
5.2 Stable Droplet Deposition 114
5.3 Unstable Droplet Deposition 120
5.4 Capillarity-Driven Spreading 122
5.5 Coalescence 126
5.6 Phase Change 131
5.7 Summary 134
References 135
6. Manufacturing of Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) 141
David B. Wallace
6.1 Introduction 141
6.2 Limitations and Opportunities in MEMS Fabrication 142
6.3 Benefits of Inkjet in MEMS Fabrication 143
6.4 Chemical Sensors 144
6.5 Optical MEMS Devices 147
6.6 Bio-MEMS Devices 151
6.7 Assembly and Packaging 152
6.8 Conclusions 156
Acknowledgements 156
References 156
7. Conductive Tracks and Passive Electronics 159
Jake Reder
7.1 Introduction 159
7.2 Vision 159
7.3 Drivers 160
7.4 Incumbent Technologies 162
7.5 Conductive Tracks and Contacts 162
7.6 Raw Materials: Ink 164
7.7 Raw Materials: Conductive Polymers 172
7.8 Raw Materials: Substrates 172
7.9 Printing Processes 174
7.10 Post Deposition Processing 174
7.11 Resistors 175
7.12 Capacitors 176
7.13 Other Passive Electronic Devices 176
7.14 Outlook 178
References 178
8. Printed Circuit Board Fabrication 183
Neil Chilton
8.1 Introduction 183
8.2 What Is a PCB? 183
8.3 How Is a PCB Manufactured Conventionally? 185
8.4 Imaging 185
8.5 PCB Design Formats 188
8.6 Inkjet Applications in PCB Manufacturing 189
8.7 Future Possibilities 202
References 205
9. Active Electronics 207
Madhusudan Singh, Hanna M. Haverinen, Yuka Yoshioka and Ghassan E. Jabbour
9.1 Introduction 207
9.2 Applications of Inkjet Printing to Active Devices 211
9.3 Future Outlook 224
References 225
10. Flat Panel Organic Light-Emitting Diode (OLED) Displays: A Case
Study 237
Julian Carter, Mark Crankshaw and Sungjune Jung
10.1 Introduction 237
10.2 Development of Inkjet Printing for OLED Displays 238
10.3 Inkjet Requirements for OLED Applications 241
10.4 Ink Formulation and Process Control 243
10.5 Print Defects and Control 246
10.6 Conclusions and Outlook 249
Acknowledgements 250
References 250
11. Radiofrequency Identification (RFID) Manufacturing: A Case Study 255
Vivek Subramanian
11.1 Introduction 255
11.2 Conventional RFID Technology 256
11.3 Applications of Printing to RFID 260
11.4 Printed Antenna Structures for RFID 260
11.5 Printed RFID Tags 263
11.6 Conclusions 273
References 273
12. Biopolymers and Cells 275
Paul Calvert and Thomas Boland
12.1 Introduction 275
12.2 Printers for Biopolymers and Cells 277
12.3 Ink Formulation 282
12.4 Printing Cells 289
12.5 Reactive Inks 292
12.6 Substrates for Printing 296
12.7 Applications 297
12.8 Conclusions 299
References 299
13. Tissue Engineering: A Case Study 307
Makoto Nakamura
13.1 Introduction 307
13.2 A Feasibility Study of Live Cell Printing by Inkjet 310
13.3 3D Biofabrication by Gelation of Inkjet Droplets 313
13.4 2D and 3D Biofabrication by a 3D Bioprinter 314
13.5 Use of Inkjet Technology for 3D Tissue Manufacturing 319
13.6 Summary and Future Prospects 322
Acknowledgements 323
References 323
14. Three-Dimensional Digital Fabrication 325
Bill O'Neill
14.1 Introduction 325
14.2 Background to Digital Fabrication 326
14.3 Digital Fabrication and Jetted Material Delivery 329
14.4 Liquid-Based Fabrication Techniques 330
14.5 Powder-Based Fabrication Techniques 335
14.6 Research Challenges 338
14.7 Future Trends 340
References 341
15. Current Inkjet Technology and Future Directions 343
Mike Willis
15.1 The Inkjet Print-Head as a Delivery Device 343
15.2 Limitations of Inkjet Technology 344
15.3 Today's Dominant Technologies and Limitations 348
15.4 Other Current Technologies 351
15.5 Emerging Technologies 353
15.6 Future Trends for Print-Head Manufacturing 357
15.7 Future Requirements and Directions 358
15.8 Summary of Status of Inkjet Technology for Digital Fabrication 361
References 362
Index 363