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Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries. / Koshtyal, Yury; Nazarov, Denis; Ezhov, Ilya; Mitrofanov, Ilya; Kim, Artem; Rymyantsev, Aleksander; Lyutakov, Oleksiy; Popovich, Anatoly; Maximov, Maxim.

In: Coatings, Vol. 9, No. 5, 301, 01.05.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Koshtyal, Y, Nazarov, D, Ezhov, I, Mitrofanov, I, Kim, A, Rymyantsev, A, Lyutakov, O, Popovich, A & Maximov, M 2019, 'Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries', Coatings, vol. 9, no. 5, 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9050301

APA

Koshtyal, Y., Nazarov, D., Ezhov, I., Mitrofanov, I., Kim, A., Rymyantsev, A., Lyutakov, O., Popovich, A., & Maximov, M. (2019). Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries. Coatings, 9(5), [301]. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9050301

Vancouver

Koshtyal Y, Nazarov D, Ezhov I, Mitrofanov I, Kim A, Rymyantsev A et al. Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries. Coatings. 2019 May 1;9(5). 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9050301

Author

Koshtyal, Yury ; Nazarov, Denis ; Ezhov, Ilya ; Mitrofanov, Ilya ; Kim, Artem ; Rymyantsev, Aleksander ; Lyutakov, Oleksiy ; Popovich, Anatoly ; Maximov, Maxim. / Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries. In: Coatings. 2019 ; Vol. 9, No. 5.

BibTeX

@article{a07721a6f1d64ba4873418c2263a2d9e,
title = "Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries",
abstract = "Atomic layer deposition (ALD) provides a promising route for depositing uniform thin-film electrodes for Li-ion batteries. In this work, bis(methylcyclopentadienyl) nickel(II) (Ni(MeCp)2) and bis(cyclopentadienyl) nickel(II) (NiCp2) were used as precursors for NiO ALD. Oxygen plasma was used as a counter-reactant. The films were studied by spectroscopic ellipsometry, scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray reflectometry, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The results show that the optimal temperature for the deposition for NiCp2 was 200–300 °C, but the optimal Ni(MeCp)2 growth per ALD cycle was 0.011–0.012 nm for both precursors at 250–300 °C. The films deposited using NiCp2 and oxygen plasma at 300 °C using optimal ALD condition consisted mainly of stoichiometric polycrystalline NiO with high density (6.6 g/cm3) and low roughness (0.34 nm). However, the films contain carbon impurities. The NiO films (thickness 28–30 nm) deposited on stainless steel showed a specific capacity above 1300 mAh/g, which is significantly more than the theoretical capacity of bulk NiO (718 mAh/g) because it includes the capacity of the NiO film and the pseudo-capacity of the gel-like solid electrolyte interface film. The presence of pseudo-capacity and its increase during cycling is discussed based on a detailed analysis of cyclic voltammograms and charge–discharge curves (U(C))",
keywords = "Atomic layer deposition, Li-ion batteries, Nickel oxide, Thin films",
author = "Yury Koshtyal and Denis Nazarov and Ilya Ezhov and Ilya Mitrofanov and Artem Kim and Aleksander Rymyantsev and Oleksiy Lyutakov and Anatoly Popovich and Maxim Maximov",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3390/coatings9050301",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Coatings",
issn = "2079-6412",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Atomic layer deposition of nio to produce active material for thin-film lithium-ion batteries

AU - Koshtyal, Yury

AU - Nazarov, Denis

AU - Ezhov, Ilya

AU - Mitrofanov, Ilya

AU - Kim, Artem

AU - Rymyantsev, Aleksander

AU - Lyutakov, Oleksiy

AU - Popovich, Anatoly

AU - Maximov, Maxim

PY - 2019/5/1

Y1 - 2019/5/1

N2 - Atomic layer deposition (ALD) provides a promising route for depositing uniform thin-film electrodes for Li-ion batteries. In this work, bis(methylcyclopentadienyl) nickel(II) (Ni(MeCp)2) and bis(cyclopentadienyl) nickel(II) (NiCp2) were used as precursors for NiO ALD. Oxygen plasma was used as a counter-reactant. The films were studied by spectroscopic ellipsometry, scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray reflectometry, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The results show that the optimal temperature for the deposition for NiCp2 was 200–300 °C, but the optimal Ni(MeCp)2 growth per ALD cycle was 0.011–0.012 nm for both precursors at 250–300 °C. The films deposited using NiCp2 and oxygen plasma at 300 °C using optimal ALD condition consisted mainly of stoichiometric polycrystalline NiO with high density (6.6 g/cm3) and low roughness (0.34 nm). However, the films contain carbon impurities. The NiO films (thickness 28–30 nm) deposited on stainless steel showed a specific capacity above 1300 mAh/g, which is significantly more than the theoretical capacity of bulk NiO (718 mAh/g) because it includes the capacity of the NiO film and the pseudo-capacity of the gel-like solid electrolyte interface film. The presence of pseudo-capacity and its increase during cycling is discussed based on a detailed analysis of cyclic voltammograms and charge–discharge curves (U(C))

AB - Atomic layer deposition (ALD) provides a promising route for depositing uniform thin-film electrodes for Li-ion batteries. In this work, bis(methylcyclopentadienyl) nickel(II) (Ni(MeCp)2) and bis(cyclopentadienyl) nickel(II) (NiCp2) were used as precursors for NiO ALD. Oxygen plasma was used as a counter-reactant. The films were studied by spectroscopic ellipsometry, scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray reflectometry, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The results show that the optimal temperature for the deposition for NiCp2 was 200–300 °C, but the optimal Ni(MeCp)2 growth per ALD cycle was 0.011–0.012 nm for both precursors at 250–300 °C. The films deposited using NiCp2 and oxygen plasma at 300 °C using optimal ALD condition consisted mainly of stoichiometric polycrystalline NiO with high density (6.6 g/cm3) and low roughness (0.34 nm). However, the films contain carbon impurities. The NiO films (thickness 28–30 nm) deposited on stainless steel showed a specific capacity above 1300 mAh/g, which is significantly more than the theoretical capacity of bulk NiO (718 mAh/g) because it includes the capacity of the NiO film and the pseudo-capacity of the gel-like solid electrolyte interface film. The presence of pseudo-capacity and its increase during cycling is discussed based on a detailed analysis of cyclic voltammograms and charge–discharge curves (U(C))

KW - Atomic layer deposition

KW - Li-ion batteries

KW - Nickel oxide

KW - Thin films

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85065760144&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/atomic-layer-deposition-nio-produce-active-material-thinfilm-lithiumion-batteries

U2 - 10.3390/coatings9050301

DO - 10.3390/coatings9050301

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85065760144

VL - 9

JO - Coatings

JF - Coatings

SN - 2079-6412

IS - 5

M1 - 301

ER -

ID: 45905373