I've got no idea why so much (additive manufacturing) research is behind an access wall that only university students or those willing to pay ££ per paper, but I was reading Material issues in additive manufacturing: A review and the last set of images looked very intriguing:
That would leave enough for a 120um thick soldermask each side to acheive a 1.64mm PCB.
Anyway, it seems they're using "silver electrically conductive adhesive" and I was able to dig around and find something:
Why is the resistivity 1/6 of copper? I don't recall silver being that much better than copper in the electrical resistivity table I found a day or two ago.
[26th Aug] It's because I didn't notice that the pastes are in ohms/sq not milliohms/sq. The first paste is 20mOhm/sq and the second is 10-50.
Most universities have an agreement with publications that encourage students to publish papers for credit. Those publications have contracts with anyone submitting a paper that restrict them from doing certain things with the papers. That includes openly publishing it for free or pay.
But there's been a loophole in as long as this has been a thing: they are allowed to share their paper one-on-one for free. The vast majority of people who have published papers will gladly email you a copy if you ask. They see ZERO money from anyone buying their paper through the publication and do not give two craps about the papers profits.
Yes, it's a hassle to have to email the authors, but I bet you could get any paper you wanted.
As I started to suspect, it's been done with FDM: https://hackaday.com/2018/04/13/hybrid-3d-printer-creates-complete-circuits-case-and-all/
Is this like the 5 axis printer made by a uni student where it never got picked up by anyone else in the community and was slowly forgotten? Or perhaps it was because the feature sizes were still too large -- a 0.2mm nozzle would only be able to make 0.4mm lines before Cura 5.0.
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Little known secret of research papers:
Most universities have an agreement with publications that encourage students to publish papers for credit. Those publications have contracts with anyone submitting a paper that restrict them from doing certain things with the papers. That includes openly publishing it for free or pay.
But there's been a loophole in as long as this has been a thing: they are allowed to share their paper one-on-one for free. The vast majority of people who have published papers will gladly email you a copy if you ask. They see ZERO money from anyone buying their paper through the publication and do not give two craps about the papers profits.
Yes, it's a hassle to have to email the authors, but I bet you could get any paper you wanted.
Are you sure? yes | no
At least now I know.
Are you sure? yes | no
As I started to suspect, it's been done with FDM: https://hackaday.com/2018/04/13/hybrid-3d-printer-creates-complete-circuits-case-and-all/
Is this like the 5 axis printer made by a uni student where it never got picked up by anyone else in the community and was slowly forgotten? Or perhaps it was because the feature sizes were still too large -- a 0.2mm nozzle would only be able to make 0.4mm lines before Cura 5.0.
Are you sure? yes | no