TY - JOUR
T1 - Inkjet-Printed Polyelectrolyte Seed Layer-Based, Customizable, Transparent, Ultrathin Gold Electrodes and Facile Implementation of Photothermal Effect
AU - Kim, Duhee
AU - Hong, Nari
AU - Hong, Woongki
AU - Lee, Junhee
AU - Bissannagari, Murali
AU - Cho, Youngjae
AU - Kwon, Hyuk Jun
AU - Jang, Jae Eun
AU - Kang, Hongki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/4/26
Y1 - 2023/4/26
N2 - Recently, interest in transparent electrodes has been increasing in biomedical engineering applications for such as electro-optical hybrid neuro-technologies. However, conventional photolithography-based electrode fabrication methods have limited design customization and large-area applicability. For biomedical engineering applications, it is crucial that we can easily customize the electrode design for different patients over a large body area. In this paper, we propose a novel method to fabricate customization-friendly, transparent, ultrathin, gold microelectrodes using inkjet printing technology. Unlike with typical direct printing of conductive inks, we inkjet-printed a polymer nucleation-inducing seed layer, followed by mask-less vacuum deposition of ultrathin gold (<6 nm) to produce selectively, high-transparency electrodes in the predefined shapes of the inkjet-printed polymer. Owing to the design flexibility of inkjet printing, the transparent ultrathin gold electrodes can be highly efficient in design customization over a large area. Simultaneously, a layer of nonconductive gold islands is formed in the nonprinted region, and this nanostructured layer can implement a photothermal effect that offers versatility for novel biomedical applications. As a demonstration of the effectiveness of these transparent electrodes, and the facile implementation of the photothermal effect for biomedical applications, we successfully fabricated transparent resistive temperature detectors. We used these to directly sense the photothermal effect and to demonstrate their bioimaging capabilities.
AB - Recently, interest in transparent electrodes has been increasing in biomedical engineering applications for such as electro-optical hybrid neuro-technologies. However, conventional photolithography-based electrode fabrication methods have limited design customization and large-area applicability. For biomedical engineering applications, it is crucial that we can easily customize the electrode design for different patients over a large body area. In this paper, we propose a novel method to fabricate customization-friendly, transparent, ultrathin, gold microelectrodes using inkjet printing technology. Unlike with typical direct printing of conductive inks, we inkjet-printed a polymer nucleation-inducing seed layer, followed by mask-less vacuum deposition of ultrathin gold (<6 nm) to produce selectively, high-transparency electrodes in the predefined shapes of the inkjet-printed polymer. Owing to the design flexibility of inkjet printing, the transparent ultrathin gold electrodes can be highly efficient in design customization over a large area. Simultaneously, a layer of nonconductive gold islands is formed in the nonprinted region, and this nanostructured layer can implement a photothermal effect that offers versatility for novel biomedical applications. As a demonstration of the effectiveness of these transparent electrodes, and the facile implementation of the photothermal effect for biomedical applications, we successfully fabricated transparent resistive temperature detectors. We used these to directly sense the photothermal effect and to demonstrate their bioimaging capabilities.
KW - Inkjet printing
KW - Photothermal effect
KW - Polyelectrolyte
KW - Transparent electrode
KW - Ultrathin metal thin film
KW - nucleation inducing seed layer
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85152700461
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.3c01160
DO - 10.1021/acsami.3c01160
M3 - Article
C2 - 37039810
AN - SCOPUS:85152700461
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 15
SP - 20508
EP - 20519
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 16
ER -