Photopatternable, Degradable, and Performant Polyimide Network Substrates for E-Waste Mitigation

02 May 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The continuous accumulation of electronic waste is reaching alarming levels necessitating sustainable solutions to mitigate environmental impact. Fabrication of the commercial electronic substrates also requires high heat. As an alternative, we propose a series of reprocessible electronic substrates based on photopolymerizable polyimides containing degradable ester linkages. We synthesize imide-containing diallyl monomers derived from readily available chemical feedstocks to produce high-quality substrates via rapid photopolymerization. Such materials possess exceptional thermal properties (thermal conductivity, K = 0.37-0.54 WmK-1; degradation temperature, Td > 300 °C), dielectric (dielectric constant, Dk = 2.81-3.05; dielectric loss, Df < 0.024) and mechanical properties (Strength ~ 50 MPa ; ultimate elongation, dL/L0 > 5%) needed in flex electronic applications. When utilized as electronic substrates, we demonstrate mild depolymerization via transesterification reactions to recover and reuse the functional components. Moreover, these photopolymer resins remain compatible with commercial workflows and enable fabrication of next-generation, dense multilayered circuits.

Keywords

E-Waste
Polyimide
Photopatternable
Degradable Network
Multilayered Circuits
Photopolymerizable

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Photopatternable, Degradable, and Performant Polyimide Network Substrates for E-Waste Mitigation
Description
Monomer synthesis, polymer synthesis, degradation, and design of demonstrations are included. Characterization methods and additional figures and tables are also included.
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