Flexible Electronics News

BASF Launches Metal-Based Inks Under the Name of CypoPrint

Cost-efficient starting material for additive manufacturing of flexible RFID antennas

Author Image

By: DAVID SAVASTANO

Contributing Editor, Coatings World and Ink World

CypoPrint is the name of a new range of metal-based inks from BASF destined for the production of flexible antennas for RFID tags. The non-conductive CypoPrint inks from BASF offer a cost-efficient and more eco-friendly alternative to the current etching technique and represent the first solution for the additive manufacturing of RFID antennas.

The benefits of additive manufacturing compared with aluminum etching are the efficient use of raw materials and the lower environmental impact. The new CypoPrint inks replace the expensive, conductive printing pastes previously used in the additive process and substantially reduce the manufacturing costs of RFID antennas. This makes the additive manufacturing process commercially viable for the first time.

The non-conductive CypoPrint inks developed by BASF are applied to polyester films using a standard printing process and then given a conductive metallic coating in an electroplating system for flexible electronics.

“Because the CypoPrint inks are converted and made conductive in the electroplating stage, we refer to them as ‘seeder’ inks. CypoPrint is the ‘seed’ that we apply to the object where we later want to ‘grow’ copper conductor structures,” explains Dr. Christoffer Kieburg, project manager in BASF’s metal systems business. “Another customer benefit is the variable layer thickness and conductivity of the antennas, which can be easily adapted to the various memory chips during
electroplating.”

In addition to the CypoPrint seeder inks, BASF’s portfolio also includes a primer to achieve even better adhesion of the antenna structures formed on the film.

Keep Up With Our Content. Subscribe To Ink World magazine Newsletters