Title of article
Dispersion and rheology of nickel nanoparticle inks
Author/Authors
Wenjea J. Tseng، نويسنده , , CHUN-NAN CHEN، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
7
From page
1213
To page
1219
Abstract
Nickel nanoparticles were dispersed in α-terpineol solvents, and their rheological behaviour
and suspension structure were examined using various organic surfactants, surfactant
concentrations (0–10 wt.% of the powder) and solids loadings (φ=0.01–0.28 in volumetric
ratios) over a shear-rate range 100–103 s−1. A surfactant of oligomer polyester was found
effective in the nanoparticle dispersion. An optimal surfactant concentration ca. 2–4 wt.% of the
solids was found; beyond which, the apparent viscosity increased adversely. The
oligomer-polyester molecules appeared to adsorb preferentially on the nanoparticle surface,
forming a steric layer which facilitates the ink flow for the improved dispersion. A pseudoplastic
flow behaviour was found as shear rate increased, and a maximum solids concentration (φm)
was estimated as φm=0.32. The interparticle potential was dominated by van der Waals
attraction in the terpineol liquid, and a reaction-limited cluster aggregation (RLCA) featuring
with a fractal dimension (Df) of 2.0 was calculated. This finding together with the reduced φm
reveals that the nanoparticle inks were flocculated in character even with the presence of
polyester surfactant. Additionally, a porous (electrically conductive) particulate network was
expected to form if the inks were printed on a non-conductive substrate followed then by
drying and sintering in practice. C 2006 Springer Science + Business Media, Inc.
Journal title
Journal of Materials Science
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Journal of Materials Science
Record number
830608
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