| Literature DB >> 33805043 |
Tae Wan Park1, Young Lim Kang2, Sang Hyeon Lee2, Gu Won No3, Eun-Soo Park3, Chan Park2, Junghoon Lee4, Woon Ik Park2.
Abstract
Various high-performance anode and cathode materials, such as lithium carbonate, lithium titanate, cobalt oxides, silicon, graphite, germanium, and tin, have been widely investigated in an effort to enhance the energy density storage properties of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). However, the structural manipulation of anode materials to improve the battery performance remains a challenging issue. In LIBs, optimization of the anode material is a key technology affecting not only the power density but also the lifetime of the device. Here, we introduce a novel method by which to obtain nanostructures for LIB anode application on various surfaces via nanotransfer printing (nTP) process. We used a spark plasma sintering (SPS) process to fabricate a sputter target made of Li2CO3, which is used as an anode material for LIBs. Using the nTP process, various Li2CO3 nanoscale patterns, such as line, wave, and dot patterns on a SiO2/Si substrate, were successfully obtained. Furthermore, we show highly ordered Li2CO3 nanostructures on a variety of substrates, such as Al, Al2O3, flexible PET, and 2-Hydroxylethyl Methacrylate (HEMA) contact lens substrates. It is expected that the approach demonstrated here can provide new pathway to generate many other designable structures of various LIB anode materials.Entities:
Keywords: Li2CO3; SPS process; lithium-ion battery; nanostructure; nanotransfer printing
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805043 PMCID: PMC8036371 DOI: 10.3390/ma14071585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Fabrication of a Li2CO3 sputter target using a Spark Plasma Sintering (SPS) system. (a) Schematic image of the SPS system. (b) Photographic image of the working SPS system for the fabrication of the Li2CO3 sputter target. (c) Li2CO3 raw material (powder). (d) Three-inch Li2CO3 sputter target fabricated by the SPS process.
Figure 2Analysis of the Li2CO3 powder and Li2CO3 sputter target. (a) SEM images of the surface microstructures of the Li2CO3 powder and the Li2CO3 sputter target. (b) XRD patterns of the Li2CO3 powder and Li2CO3 sputter target.
Figure 3Various Li2CO3 patterns formed by the nTP process. (a) Procedure of the pattern formation of Li2CO3 nanostructures by nTP. (b) Photographic image of a transfer-printed Li2CO3 pattern on a SiO2/Si substrate. (c) Various pattern geometries obtained by the nTP process.
Figure 4Transfer-printed Li2CO3 nanopatterns on the various substrates. (a) Key process of nTP for the fabrication of Li2CO3 nanostructures on a contact lens. (b) Photographic image of a Li2CO3 250-nm-line pattern on the soft contact lens. The inset image is the magnified SEM image of the Li2CO3 line pattern on the contact lens. (c) Transfer-printed line patterns on various material surfaces, in this case metal (Al), ceramic (Al2O3), and polymer (PET) substrates.