“3D printing is a very useful manufacturing method for the fabrication of electrochemical devices. Typically, accessible fused filament fabrication (FFF) is the most used method; but it is limited to the materials of use, mainly to carbon/polylactic acid blend. The use of metal 3D printed devices produced by FFF would offer very useful combination of advantages such as robustness, and electrocatalytic surfaces at a low cost. Here, 3D printed copper electrodes were successfully prepared by FFF followed by a sintering step. The physical and electrochemical properties of FFF 3D printed copper electrodes were characterised using various complementary techniques, while the electrochemical performance was evaluated for the non-enzymatic sensing of glucose as a first demonstration of applicability. Such low-cost 3D-printing method for fabrication of metallic electrodes will be further applicable for a wide variety of devices
Full paper published to ScienceDirect December 2021https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2352940721003164