Additive manufacturing of Zn with submicron resolution and its conversion into Zn/ZnO core-shell structures
Abstract
Electrohydrodynamic redox 3D printing (EHD-RP) is an additive manufacturing (AM) technique with submicron resolution and multi-metal capabilities, offering the possibility to switch chemistry during deposition “on-the-fly”. Despite the potential for synthesizing a large range of metals by electrochemical small-scale AM techniques, to date, only Cu and Ag have been reproducibly deposited by EHD-RP. Here, we extend the materials palette available to EHD-RP by using aqueous solvents instead of organic solvents, as used previously. We demonstrate deposition of Cu and Zn from sacrificial anodes immersed in acidic aqueous solvents. Mass spectrometry indicates that the choice of the solvent is important to the deposition of pure Zn. Additionally, we show that the deposited Zn structures, 250 nm in width, can be partially converted into semiconducting ZnO structures by oxidation at 325 °C in air. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000584630Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
NanoscaleVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Royal Society of ChemistryOrganisational unit
03692 - Spolenak, Ralph / Spolenak, Ralph
03430 - Zenobi, Renato / Zenobi, Renato
Funding
188491 - Multi Material Micro Additive Manufacturing Approach (SNF)
178765 - Soft ionization mass spectrometry for studying noncovalent interactions (SNF)
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