Revealing The Morphology of Ink and Aerosol Jet Printed Palladium‐Silver Alloys Fabricated from Metal Organic Decomposition Inks

Author:

Farr Nicholas T.H12ORCID,Davies Matthew3ORCID,Nohl James1ORCID,Abrams Kerry J.1ORCID,Schäfer Jan4ORCID,Lai Yufeng3ORCID,Gerling Torsten4ORCID,Stehling Nicola1ORCID,Mehta Danielle5,Zhang Jingqiong6ORCID,Mihaylova Lyudmila6ORCID,Willmott Jon R.3ORCID,Black Kate5ORCID,Rodenburg Cornelia12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Sir Robert Hadfield Building Mappin Street University of Sheffield Sheffield S1 3JD UK

2. Insigneo Institute for In Silico Medicine, The Pam Liversidge Building Sheffield S1 3JD UK

3. Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering Portobello Centre, Pitt Street. University of Sheffield Sheffield S1 4ET UK

4. Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology e.V. (INP) Felix‐Hausdorff‐Str. 2 17489 Greifswald Germany

5. School of Engineering University of Liverpool Liverpool L69 3BX UK

6. Department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering The University of Sheffield Amy Johnson Building, Portobello Street Sheffield S1 3JD UK

Abstract

AbstractPalladium films hold signicance due to their remarkable affinity for hydrogen diffusion, rendering them valauble for the seperation and purification of hydrogen in membrane reactors. However, palladium is expensive, and its films can become brittle after only a few cycles of hydrogen separation. Alloying with silver has been shown to overcome the problem of palladium embrittlement. Palladium‐silver films have been produced via several methods but all have drawbacks, such as difficulties controlling the alloy composition. This study explores two promising jet printing methods: Inkjet and Aerosoljet. Both methods offer potential advantages such as direct patterning, which reduces waste, enables thin film production, and allows for the control of alloy composition. For the first time, palladium‐silver alloys have been produced via inkjet printing using a palladium‐silver metal organic decomposition (MOD) ink, which alloys at a temperature of 300 °C with nitrogen. Similarly, this study also demonstrates a pioneering approach for Aerosol Jet printing, showing the potential of a novel room‐temperature method, for the deposition of palladium‐silver MOD inks. This low temperature approach is considered an important development as palladium‐silver MOD inks are originally designed for deposition on heated substrates.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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