Answer 1:
Electrical conduction is the movement of
electrons through a material, creating an electric
current. Some materials are naturally able to
allow the flow of electrons through them, and we
call these materials electrical conductors.
Metals are especially good conductors of
electricity. However, in order to make a
conducting ink, you need a liquid, and most metals
are solid at room temperature. To get around this
challenge, the inventors of conducting ink used
metal nanoparticles. These nanoparticles are
tiny spheres of metal, so small that you could fit
over 5 million in the period at the end of a
sentence. Each nanoparticle can conduct
electricity, and when strings of nanoparticles
form, like pearls in a necklace, electrons can
travel from one nanoparticle to the next.
So, conducting ink usually contains two main
components: metal nanoparticles (usually
silver), and liquid to carry the
nanoparticles. When you apply the mixture of
liquid and nanoparticles to paper, it dries, and
the random networks of nanoparticles that contact
each other are locked in place. These networks of
metal allow the ink to conduct electricity. You
just laid down a path of silver for the electrons
to follow.
It is unlikely, though, that this method of
creating electrical circuits will replace the
current method of producing circuit boards. The
conducting ink relies on the random creation of
paths of metal nanoparticles, so thicker films of
ink increase the probability that enough paths of
nanoparticles will form for sufficient electrical
conduction. Current microchip fabrication
involves creating circuits which are much smaller
than the thickness of conducting ink you would
need for the circuit board to work.
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