Abstract
An extensive range of metals can be dissolved and re-deposited in liquid solvents using electrochemistry. We harness this concept for additive manufacturing, demonstrating the focused electrohydrodynamic ejection of metal ions dissolved from sacrificial anodes and their subsequent reduction to elemental metals on the substrate. This technique, termed electrohydrodynamic redox printing (EHD-RP), enables the direct, ink-free fabrication of polycrystalline multi-metal 3D structures without the need for post-print processing. On-the-fly switching and mixing of two metals printed from a single multichannel nozzle facilitates a chemical feature size of <400 nm with a spatial resolution of 250 nm at printing speeds of up to 10 voxels per second. As shown, the additive control of the chemical architecture of materials provided by EHD-RP unlocks the synthesis of 3D bi-metal structures with programmed local properties and opens new avenues for the direct fabrication of chemically architected materials and devices. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000339619Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature CommunicationsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureOrganisational unit
03462 - Poulikakos, Dimos (emeritus) / Poulikakos, Dimos (emeritus)
03430 - Zenobi, Renato / Zenobi, Renato
03692 - Spolenak, Ralph / Spolenak, Ralph
02891 - ScopeM / ScopeM
Funding
146180 - Facile nanostructuring by direct printing: Fundamentals and applications in light-nanostructure interactions (SNF)
178765 - Soft ionization mass spectrometry for studying noncovalent interactions (SNF)
Related publications and datasets
Is derived from: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000409601
More
Show all metadata