“…Printed electronics constitute an emerging technology with potential applications in photovoltaics, transistors, displays, batteries, antennas, and sensors. − Recent attention has focused on the realization of low-cost large-area platforms for flexible and disposable devices. − High-resolution direct printing techniques are of particular interest as alternatives to conventional vacuum deposition and photolithographic patterning for the production of functional films such as electrodes, gate dielectrics, and semiconductor layers. Each of the various direct printing techniques, including microcontact printing, nano-imprinting, screen printing, drop-on-demand inkjet printing, and roll-to-roll printing, can be categorized as either a noncontact or contact printing method based on the printing procedure used. − In noncontact printing, the patterning process involves discharging the ink solution without making direct contact with the target surface. ,, Inkjet printing, aerosol-jet printing, spraying, and vapor-jet printing are included in this category. ,, However, these techniques are only suitable for certain printing applications because the jetting of the organic ink is highly sensitive to the patterning conditions, including temperature, viscosity, concentration, and humidity. − Furthermore, in noncontact printing, the patterning precision is often limited by the formation of satellites and tails, which degrades the electrical performance of the printed material and the reproducibility of the patterned devices. , Contact printing methods, in which materials are directly patterned on a target substrate using a transfer medium (e.g., a mold, stamp, or roll), have been developed as another technique for fabricating printed electronics. , These methods can afford patterns with greater patterning precision by the contact between the transfer medium and the target substrate, but they have low process rates and may damage the substrate surface. These drawbacks have prevented the commercial use of contact printing methods.…”