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Multi material additive manufacturing of low sintering temperature Bi2Mo2O9 ceramics with Ag floating electrodes by selective laser burnout.pdf (3.53 MB)

Multi-material additive manufacturing of low sintering temperature Bi2Mo2O9 ceramics with Ag floating electrodes by selective laser burnout

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-09, 09:46 authored by Reza Gheisari, Henry Chamberlain, George Chi-Tangyie, Shiyu Zhang, Athanasios GoulasAthanasios Goulas, Chih-Kuo Lee, Tom Whittaker, Dawei Wang, Annapoorani KetharamAnnapoorani Ketharam, Avishek Ghosh, Vaidhy VaidhyanathanVaidhy Vaidhyanathan, William WhittowWilliam Whittow, Darren Cadman, J. C. Vardaxoglou, Ian M Reaney, Daniel EngstromDaniel Engstrom
Additive manufacturing (AM) of co-fired low temperature ceramics offers a unique route for fabrication of novel 3D radio frequency (RF) and microwave communication components, embedded electronics and sensors. This paper describes the first-ever direct 3D printing of low temperature co-fired ceramics/floating electrode 3D structures. Slurry-based AM and selective laser burnout (SLB) were used to fabricate bulk dielectric, Bi2Mo2O9 (BMO, sintering temperature = 620–650°C, εr = 38) with silver (Ag) internal floating electrodes. A printable BMO slurry was developed and the SLB optimised to improve edge definition and burn out the binder without damaging the ceramic. The SLB increased the green strength needed for shape retention, produced crack-free parts and prevented Ag leaching into the ceramic during co-firing. The green parts were sintered after SLB in a conventional furnace at 645°C for 4 h and achieved 94.5% density, compressive strength of 4097 MPa, a relative permittivity (εr) of 33.8 and a loss tangent (tan δ) of 0.0004 (8 GHz) for BMO. The feasibility of using SLB followed by a post-printing sintering step to create BMO/Ag 3D structures was thus demonstrated.

Funding

UK’s Engineering and Physical Science Research Council through the grant “Synthesizing 3D metamaterials for RF, microwave and terahertz applications”, SYMETA, grant reference EP/N010493/1

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
  • Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering

Department

  • Materials

Published in

Virtual and Physical Prototyping

Volume

15

Issue

2

Pages

133-147

Publisher

Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Acceptance date

2019-12-13

Publication date

2020-01-06

Copyright date

2020

ISSN

1745-2759

eISSN

1745-2767

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Daniel Engstrom. Deposit date: 7 January 2020

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