In this work, we present a proof‐of‐concept demonstration of inkjet‐printed resistive temperature sensors based on nanoparticle platinum ink on flexible polyimide substrates. The resistive temperature sensors are designed as meander structures with a target nominal resistance of 100 and 1000 Ω to be compared to conventional bulk Pt100 and Pt1000 resistors. Thermogravimetric analysis and in situ resistance measurements identified 250°C as the optimal sintering temperature, enabling sufficient solvent removal for conductive structure formation while avoiding Pt surface oxidation and polyimide substrate degradation. Electrical characterization in the 20°C–80°C range revealed a linear relationship between resistance and temperature with effective temperature coefficients of resistance (~48%/57%) and sensitivities (~72%/87%) compared to Pt100/Pt1000 standards, respectively. Mechanical testing over 400 bending cycles showed less than 1% change in electrical resistance, confirming robust flexibility. This study demonstrates the feasibility of translating nanoparticle Pt‐based resistive temperature sensors into flexible and automotive sensing applications, offering low‐temperature processability, stable temperature coefficients of resistance, linear sensitivity, mechanical robustness, and chemical stability across 20°C–80°C range.
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Shawon Alam
Thomas Kister
Alexander Scholz
Advanced Engineering Materials
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Leibniz-Institute for New Materials
Université franco-allemande
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Alam et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75bbfc6e9836116a23a98 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/adem.202501740
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