Conductive Paint Lessons
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Lessons on Conductive Paint
Related to Pulse Choker Hack Notes for July 15th, 2009:
"We tried silk screening silver conductive paint (MG Chemicals 842-20G) onto two different types of fabric, a water resistant one and a water proof "leather like" one. Both showed very high resistance (higher than the meter can read) even for very short thick traces. It looks really cool though - hopefully we can figure out what we're doing wrong, and make this work. We also tried measuring the resistance of a huge dollop of paint on the spoon: silver = infinite resistance (!), copper = 200kOhms. It didn't matter if the paint was dried or wet. Note that we shook the bottle prior to use to ensure that the silver particles were dispersed evenly."
Types of Conductive Paint
- Opaque paint
- Nickel:
- Higher resistance - ~5-6 ohms per square
- Cracks when dried and flexed - Desktop Fabrication: Wearable Electronics Circuitry
- Nickel:
- Copper:
- Higher resistance - ~5 ohms per square, though our hacking yielded different results. We bought CuPro-Cote #292-4 from Less EMF Inc..
- Reasonably priced - ~$30 for 4 oz
- Copper:
- Silver:
- Low resistance - ~0.1 ohms per square according to Desktop Fabrication: Wearable Electronics Circuitry. The type we bought (MG Chemicals 842-20G) promises 0.2 ohms/mil (or ~7.9 ohms/mm)
- Expensive - ~$30 for 0.7 oz (20 g) from Less EMF Inc.
- Silver:
- Transparent paint
- Orgacon from Agfa - conductive, can be flexed, transparent, can be silk-screened
- Alternatives
- Wire glue - $4 for 0.3 oz
- Conductive pen
Heeds
- Shake paint well to ensure metal particles are well dispersed
- Keep ink wet while working with it. If work time is protracted, mix paint frequently.
- Resistivity measures are suppose to be accurate only when paint has fully dried
Art Uses
- Paper Circuits by Leah Buckley: conductive paint, magnetic paint, magnets
- Paper printed circuit board by Peter Blasser