Dayton Daily News

Technique uses transforma­tive manufactur­ing

- ByDonnaLin­dner

Electronic circuits, the backbone of modern electronic devices, require precise integratio­n of materials intwo- andthree-dimensiona­l space to control the flow of electric current. Traditiona­l manufactur­ing of electronic­s requires expensive equipment, complicate­d processes, and are not readily customizab­le after purchase.

Imagine the possibilit­y of designing your own electronic­s rather than having tobuythemn­ew. What if you needed a newradio antenna to operate at a different frequency than the one you currently have, or desire to create a sensor that could monitor your exposure to toxins, or require a capacitor/resistor network to better interface your Bluetooth speakers? Typically, this would require an entirely new system or electronic device.

On the horizon is a new technique using lasers tocustomiz­e, design, repair and build electronic­s. Developed at the Air Force Research Laboratory, this laser“writing” technique allows the user to design and precisely place conducting, insulating and semiconduc­ting materials with ease utilizing a substrate coated with a thin film. In this simple and elegant solution, the unstructur­ed, amorphous film, a laser and the surroundin­g air are all that are required to drive the necessary patterning and local electronic property control needed for functional devices.

The report by scientists at AFRL and collaborat­ors at UES Inc., Case Western Reserve University, University of Dayton, University of California at Los Angeles, andUnivers­ity ofCambridg­e appears in the journal “Materials Today.”

The group defines this new manufactur­ing strategy as “transforma­tive manufactur­ing.” Unlike additive or subtractiv­e manufactur­ing, where you are either adding or removing materials to make a functional device, transforma­tive manufactur­ing requires a film and a laser beam to pattern electronic devices. The laser beam impacting the sample acts as a means to change the thin film through localized heating and causes reactions with theenviron­mentat extremely high temperatur­es.

The uniqueness of using lasers lies in the ability to locally vary the intensity of light and exposure time, which precisely modifies the crystal structure and chemistry of the thin film in a location as small as one micrometer (much smaller than the width of a human hair). The amorphous film is then readily transforme­d into three different materials: semiconduc­ting crystallin­e molybdenum disulfide, conducting molybdenum dioxide, and insulating molybdenum trioxide all with the precise conditions.

“Alternativ­e strategies to pattern these materials outside of a clean room environmen­t, have enabled rapid prototypin­g and eliminated design constraint­s imposed by traditiona­l fabricatio­n,” saidDr. NicholasGl­avin, materials scientist from the Air Force Research Laboratory. “Future developmen­t could see fully user-customized electronic­s.”

By modifying the laser pattern, individual electronic circuits can be designed on the fly with nearly complete freedomwit­hin theboundso­f the manufactur­ing process. This is in contrast to traditiona­l circuit design using thin film clean room processes, which can restrict reconfigur­ability, requiring expensive start-up equipment and amultitude of steps to complete.

“By engineerin­g the architectu­re of the three different phases, electrical devices such as a resistor, capacitor and chemical sensor were laser-written directly within the precursor film, representi­ng an entirely trans format ive manufactur­ing approach for the fabricatio­n of electronic circuitry,” saidDr. DrakeAusti­n, research scientist from UES Inc.

Further optimizati­on of film uniformity utilizing different laser sources and profiles is expected to result in highly controllab­le properties for future electronic­s and sensor devices. Additional­ly, exploring the transforma­tive manufactur­ing technique utilizing optical sources to include flash lamps, parallel laser sources, laser holography and pulsed laser systems will significan­tly reduce the manufactur­ing time and increase the throughput and open new potential device architectu­res.

It is expected that by laser-processing these, or similar materials in active gases, various chemical reactions can be locally induced, possibly with the ability to access other chemistrie­s/ structures as well as new reaction intermedia­tes for more complex circuitry.

The trans format ive manufactur­ing approach represents­another instrument to add to the toolbox formanufac­turing of novel electronic materialsa­nd devices, where the freedom of design and ease of manufactur­ing truly puts the user in the driver seat for customizab­le electronic­s.

The work was supported by the Air ForceOffic­eof Scientific Research. The article in “Materials Today” can be found at https://www. science direct. abs/pii/S136970212­0303394 .

About AFRL

The Air Force Research Laboratory is the primary scientific research and developmen­t center for the Air Force and Space Force. AFRLplays an integral role in leading the discovery, developmen­t, and integratio­n of affordable warfightin­g technologi­es for our air, space, and cyberspace force. With aworkforce of more than 11,000 across nine technology areas and 40 other operations across the globe, AFRL provides a diverse portfolio of science andtechnol­ogy ranging from fundamenta­l to advanced research and technology developmen­t.

Formore informatio­n, visit www.afresearch­lab.com.

 ?? U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO/SPENCER DEER ?? Researcher­s Dr. DrakeAusti­nwith UES Inc. and Dr. Nicholas Glavin with theAir Force Research Laboratory­work together in the laser writing of electronic­s laboratory.
U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO/SPENCER DEER Researcher­s Dr. DrakeAusti­nwith UES Inc. and Dr. Nicholas Glavin with theAir Force Research Laboratory­work together in the laser writing of electronic­s laboratory.

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