| Literature DB >> 24205460 |
Tobias Grünzel1, Young Joo Lee, Karsten Kuepper, Julien Bachmann.
Abstract
al">Silicon as the negative electrode material ofEntities:
Keywords: atomic layer deposition; electrochemistry; lithium ion battery electrode; silica thermal reduction; silicon nanotubes
Year: 2013 PMID: 24205460 PMCID: PMC3817651 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.4.73
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Schematic view of the proposed system, including all tunable geometric parameters. An inorganic matrix (white) defines cylindrical pores of length L and in a hexagonal order of period P. The silicon tubes (green) have a wall thickness d and an inner diameter D. The electrical contact is represented in red color.
Figure 2Preparative scheme: (a) –e–, H2C2O4/H2O, 7 °C (two-step anodization); (b) H3PO4/H2O, 45 °C (pore widening); (c) H2N(CH2)3Si(OEt)3, H2O, O3/O2, 150 °C (ALD); (d) CuCl2/HCl/H2O, 20 °C; (e) H3PO4/H2O, 45 °C; (f) Li, 670 °C; (g) HCl/H2O, 20 °C; (h) Au sputter, 20 °C. Note that despite the impression which may emanate from this cross-section representation, the aluminum oxide framework remains reticulated and continuous throughout (see Figure 1).
Figure 3Reaction of a 200-nm thick SiO2 layer on a silicon wafer with Mg element at 700 °C: (a) spectroscopic ellipsometry orientation data recorded at various positions of the sample; (b) photograph showing the inhomogeneous reaction extent and the position of the ellipsometric measurements; (c) layer stack used to model the ellipsometry data: the mixed layer is treated as a 1:1 mixture with the Lorentz–Lorentz model; (d) results of the fit: thicknesses of the unreacted SiO2 and converted Si + MgO depending on the distance from the sample edge. The experimental data are presented together with the fit curve at each position of the sample in the Supporting Information File 1 (Figure S1).
Properties of the metals M = Mg and M = Li of relevance to the thermal reduction of SiO2: standard Gibbs free energies of the reactions and metal vapor pressures at two different temperatures [22].
| Reaction | Δr | Δr | ||
| SiO2 + 2 Mg ││ Si + 2 MgO | –65 | –65 | 570 | 1000 |
| SiO2 + 4 Li ││ Si + 2 Li2O | –56 | –56 | 36 | 65 |
Figure 4Spectroscopic ellipsometry of flat samples at various stages of preparation: initial substrate with SiO2 film (blue), after reaction with Li (red), and after acidic treatment and byproduct removal (green). The experimental data are shown as thick, light crosses, whereas the model curves calculated from the corresponding models are drawn as thin, dark lines.
Figure 5(a) Photograph of two nanoporous samples before and after the reduction by Li vapor with the subsequent acidic treatment (left and right, respectively). (b) 29Si MAS NMR spectra before and after reduction. (c) 7Li MAS NMR spectrum after reduction.
Figure 6X-ray photoelectron spectrum of a Si nanotube sample at the end of the preparation: (a) survey spectrum, (b) Si 2p peak, and (c) Li 1s peak. The XPS peak positions of reference compounds are given by arrows.
Figure 7Cyclic voltammetry recorded on a silicon nanotube sample at 0.1 mV s−1 in 1 mol L−1 LiPF6 in ethylene carbonate/dimethylcarbonate by using metallic lithium as the auxiliary electrode and pseudo-reference. The scans were performed between +3.25 V and +0.05 V. The first cycle is plotted as a thin gray line, the second cycle in blue and red, and the third charge in black. The red color highlights the main reduction (charge) and oxidation (discharge) events of the material.