Use of Nanocellulose to Produce Water-Based Conductive Inks with Ag NPs for Printed Electronics

Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Mar 9;23(6):2946. doi: 10.3390/ijms23062946.

Abstract

The need for more sustainable printed electronics has emerged in the past years. Due to this, the use of nanocellulose (NC) extracted from cellulose has recently been demonstrated to provide interesting materials such as functional inks and transparent flexible films due to its properties. Its high specific surface area together with the high content of reactive hydroxyl groups provide a highly tailorable surface chemistry with applications in ink formulations as a stabilizing, capping, binding and templating agent. Moreover, NC mechanical, physical and thermal properties (high strength, low porosity and high thermal stability, respectively) provide an excellent alternative for the currently used plastic films. In this work, we present a process for the production of water-based conductive inks that uses NC both as a template for silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) formation and as an ink additive for ink formulation. The new inks present an electrical conductivity up to 2 × 106 S/m, which is in the range of current commercially available conductive inks. Finally, the new Ag NP/NC-based conductive inks have been tested to fabricate NFC antennas by screen-printing onto NC-coated paper, demonstrating to be operative.

Keywords: conductive inks; nanocellulose; screen-printing; silver nanoparticles; sustainable printed electronics.

MeSH terms

  • Electric Conductivity
  • Electronics
  • Excipients
  • Ink*
  • Metal Nanoparticles* / chemistry
  • Silver / chemistry
  • Water

Substances

  • Excipients
  • Water
  • Silver

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