Tailoring a Silver Paste for Additive Manufacturing of Co-Fired Ferrite Magnetic Components

TR Number
Date
2019-03-11
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI
Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM), or 3D-printing, has the potential for rapid prototyping of innovative designs of magnetic components used in power electronics converters. In this study, we tailored a silver paste as the metal feedstock of an extrusion 3D printer so that the metal would be compatible with a ferrite paste feedstock for 3D-printing of ferrite magnetic components. We focused on adjusting the metal formulation to match its shrinkage to that of the ferrite and to improve adhesion during the co-sintering process of the printed part. We found that a 5 wt % addition of ferrite powder in the metal paste can achieve matched shrinkage and strong adhesion. Evaluation of the co-sintered magnetic components showed no significant defects, such as cracks, warpage, or delamination, between the metal and ferrite. The shear strength between the two sintered materials was greater than 50 MPa, and the electrical resistivity of the sintered metal winding was less than twice that of the bulk silver, which is lower than those of most 3D-printed winding metals reported in the literature.

Description
Keywords
additive manufacturing, co-fire, shrinkage mismatch, ferrite magnetic components
Citation
Liu, L.; Ding, C.; Mei, Y.; Lu, G. Tailoring a Silver Paste for Additive Manufacturing of Co-Fired Ferrite Magnetic Components. Materials 2019, 12, 817.