Projects per year
Abstract
This paper presents a method of measurement to characterize the quality of inkjet printed conductive traces created with a commercially available desktop printer. Its focus lies on the investigation of the electrical connectivity and the current density distribution within a trace, as these are the main indicators for the usability of printed conductive traces. Usually electrical circuit boards (PCBs) contain arbitrary plain geometries, but due to the flexibility of the substrate on which the traces are printed a 3D scanning measuring system is needed, this allows the traversing of all axes simultaneously which usually is not implemented in state-of-the-art measurement systems. To overcome this constraint the open-source project LinuxCNC was selected as a numerical control system to scan geometries, such as helical traces (e.g., coils), by using linear and circular movements. By combining this measurement system with a giant magnetoresistance sensor (GMR) and a four-point probe measurement method, rapid characterization of the quality of inkjet printed traces was possible.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | 2015 IEEE International Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference (I2MTC 2015) Proceedings |
Pages | 1883-1888 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Publication status | Published - May 2015 |
Fields of science
- 202012 Electrical measurement technology
- 202014 Electromagnetism
- 202036 Sensor systems
- 202016 Electrical engineering
- 202037 Signal processing
- 202039 Theoretical electrical engineering
JKU Focus areas
- Mechatronics and Information Processing
Projects
- 1 Finished
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Tap.Net - Energieautarkes Drahtlosnetzwerk für sanitäre Armaturen
Beisteiner, C. (Researcher), Gstöttenmayr, R. (Researcher), Wallner, R. (Researcher) & Zagar, B. (PI)
01.01.2014 → 30.06.2017
Project: Funded research › FFG - Austrian Research Promotion Agency