Composition dependence of ionic conductivity in LiSiPO(N) thin-film electrolytes for solid-state batteries - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue ACS Applied Energy Materials Année : 2019

Composition dependence of ionic conductivity in LiSiPO(N) thin-film electrolytes for solid-state batteries

Résumé

The current commercial standard thin film electrolyte LiPON is the limiting factor for the further development of microbatteries due to its low Li+ ionic conductivity (2 × 10–6 S/cm). In order to produce more conductive electrolytes and elucidate the synthesis–properties interrelation for this system, we sputtered thin films from single-phase ceramic targets of composition Li3+xSixP1–xO4 under Ar and N2 atmospheres. The amorphous thin films produced under Ar (LiSiPO) are more conducting than the crystalline target materials (amorphization effect). Furthermore, the fact that the resulting amorphous films contain both phosphate and silicate building units (mixed-former effect) increases the conductivity to approximately the values of LiPON (10–6 S/cm). Reactive sputtering under N2 leads to oxynitride (LiSiPON) thin films with a maximum Li+ ionic conductivity of 2.06 × 10–5 S/cm (Ea = 0.45 eV), about 1 order of magnitude higher than LiPON, in accordance with previous works. These results are discussed in the context of available literature in order to elucidate the effect of Si:P and Li:(Si + P) compositional ratios on ionic conductivity. Finally, we expose a target-dependent effect of nonstoichiometric, Li-deficient depositions that is a current impediment to sputtering of highly Li+-conductive targets.

Domaines

Matériaux
Fichier non déposé

Dates et versions

hal-02294325 , version 1 (23-09-2019)

Identifiants

Citer

Theodosios Famprikis, Jules Galipaud, Oliver Clemens, Brigitte Pecquenard, Frédéric Le Cras. Composition dependence of ionic conductivity in LiSiPO(N) thin-film electrolytes for solid-state batteries. ACS Applied Energy Materials, 2019, 2 (7), pp.4782-4791. ⟨10.1021/acsaem.9b00415⟩. ⟨hal-02294325⟩
41 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More