6533b7defe1ef96bd1276720

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Room-Temperature Micropillar Growth of Lithium-Titanate-Carbon Composite Structures by Self-Biased Direct Current Magnetron Sputtering for Lithium Ion Microbatteries

Jarkko EtulaKatja LahtinenJari KoskinenNiklas WesterTimo SajavaaraUlf HelmerssonTanja KallioAjai IyerKai Arstila

subject

Materials sciencebatteriesComposite numberchemistry.chemical_elementMaterialkemiBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundSputteringElectrochemistryMaterials ChemistryGraphiteamorphous carbons; batteries; lithium titanates; microstructures; porous materialsLithium titanateDeposition (law)business.industrySputter depositionCondensed Matter Physicsamorphous carbonsElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialschemistrylithium titanatesmicrostructuresOptoelectronicsLithiumbusinessCarbonporous materials

description

Here, an unidentified type of micropillar growth is described at room temperature during conventional direct-current magnetron sputtering (DC-MS) deposition from a Li4Ti5O12+graphite sputter target under negative substrate bias and high operating pressure. These fabricated carbon-Li2O-TiO2 microstructures consisting of various Li4Ti5O12/Li2TiO3/LixTiO2 crystalline phases are demonstrated as an anode material in Li-ion microbatteries. The described micropillar fabrication method is a low-cost, substrate independent, single-step, room-temperature vacuum process utilizing a mature industrial complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible technology. Furthermore, tentative consideration is given to the effects of selected deposition parameters and the growth process, as based on extensive physical and chemical characterization. Additional studies are, however, required to understand the exact processes and interactions that form the micropillars. If this facile method is further extended to other similar metal oxide-carbon systems, it could offer alternative low-cost fabrication routes for microporous high-surface area materials in electrochemistry and microelectronics. Funding Agencies|Academy of Finland CloseLoop project [13303452]

10.1002/adfm.201904306http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-159859