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Direct-Write Printing Copper–Nickel (Cu/Ni) Alloy with Controlled Composition from a Single Electrolyte Using Co-Electrodeposition
Author(s) -
Chao Wang,
Md Emran Hossain Bhuiyan,
Salvador Moreno,
Majid MinaryJolandan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.0c01100
Subject(s) - materials science , alloy , nanocrystalline material , fabrication , copper , annealing (glass) , nickel , metallurgy , electrolyte , thermocouple , composite material , nanotechnology , electrode , medicine , chemistry , alternative medicine , pathology
Although various processes for metal printing at the micro- and mesoscale have been demonstrated, printing functional devices such as thermocouples, thermopiles, and heat flux sensors that function based on interfaces between an alloy and another alloy/metal demands processes for printing alloys. Furthermore, a high-quality and crystalline alloy is required for acceptable function of these devices. This article reports for the first time co-electrodeposition-based printing of single-phase solid solution nanocrystalline copper/nickel (Cu/Ni) alloy with various controllable compositions (Cu100Ni0 to Cu19Ni81) from a single electrolyte. The printed alloy is nanocrystalline (<35 nm), continuous, and dense with no apparent porosity, with remarkable mechanical and magnetic properties, without any postprocessing annealing such as heat treatment. In addition, a functional thermocouple fabricated using this process is demonstrated. Such a process can not only be used for fabrication of functional devices, it may also facilitate fundamental studies on alloys by printing a continuous library of alloy composition for material characterization.

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