Hydrophilic elastomers for microcontact printing of polar inks

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DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la049716o
Reference D.C. Trimbach, M. Al-Hussein, W.H. de Jeu, M. Decré, D.J. Boer and C.W.M. Bastiaansen, Hydrophilic elastomers for microcontact printing of polar inks, Langmuir 20, 4738-4742 (2004)

A moderately hydrophilic, thermoplastic elastomer poly(ether-ester)) was investigated as a stamp material for microcontact printing of a polar ink: pentaerythritol-tetrakis-(3-mercaptopropionate). Stamps with a relief structure were produced from this polymer by hot embossing, and a comparison was made with conventional poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) and oxygen-plasma-treated PDMS. It is shown that the hydrophilic stamps can be used for the repetitive printing (without re-inking) of at least 10 consecutive patterns, which preserve their etch resistance, and this in rather sharp contrast to conventional and oxygen plasma-treated PDMS stamps. It is argued that these enhanced printing characteristics of the hydrophilic stamps originate from an improved wetting and solubility of polar inks in the hydrophilic stamp.