Screen Printing on NanoPaper: Mesh, Setup, Curing
*Applies to: A4 Sheets · Last updated: 2025-11-27 13:17:47*
Stencil & mesh (starting points)
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Mesh: 325–400 stainless or polyester (select for your ink’s solids/viscosity).
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Emulsion: per vendor; target uniform EOM; avoid pinholes.
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Target prints in one pass; multiple passes only if your ink system requires thickness.
Setup
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Snap-off: light; just enough to release.
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Squeegee: medium durometer, low attack angle, steady speed.
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Flood: light flood, then print. Keep dwell minimal.
Registration & hold-down
Use a flat, clean platen. Frame with low-tack tape or alignment jigs; do not stretch the sheet.
Dry, anneal, sinter (ink-dependent)
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Stage drying to remove solvent before higher-temp steps.
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Gradual ramp to mitigate moisture-driven curl.
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Example flow: 60–80 °C dry → 120–150 °C anneal → higher-temp step if required by ink.
QC checklist
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Edge acuity & line/space under optic microscope.
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Adhesion (tape or cross-hatch).
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Sheet resistance / continuity on test traces.
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Dimensional stability after cure (measure fiducial spacing).
Troubleshooting
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Feathering/bleed: mesh too open, squeegee pressure high, or substrate too moist.
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Pinholes: contamination or under-flooding.
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Lift/poor adhesion: insufficient dry/anneal or chemistry mismatch—consult ink promoter/primer guidance.
