NICKEL-COBALT OXIDE THIN-FILMS ANODES FOR LITHIUM-ION BATTERIES

1 Mitrofanov Ilya
Co-authors:
1 Nazarov Denis 1 Koshtyal Yury 1 Ezhov Ilya 1 Fedorov Pavel 2 Rumyantsev Aleksander 1 Popovich Anatoliy 1 Maximov Maxim
Institutions:
1 Peter the Great Saint-Petersburg Polytechnic University, Saint-Petersburg, Russia, maximspbstu@mail.ru
2 Ioffe Institute, Saint-Petersburg, Russia
Conference:
12th International Conference on Nanomaterials - Research & Application, Brno, Czech Republic, EU, October 21 - 23, 2020
Proceedings:
Proceedings 12th International Conference on Nanomaterials - Research & Application
Pages:
196-201
ISBN:
978-80-87294-98-7
ISSN:
2694-930X
Published:
28th December 2020
Proceedings of the conference were published in Web of Science and Scopus.
Metrics:
825 views / 403 downloads
Abstract

Thin-film transition metal oxides can be applied as transparent conductive coatings, photocatalysts, thermoelectric generators, and battery electrodes. In power sources application binary transition metal oxides are attractive due to high theoretical capacities. Among them nickel-cobalt oxides possess the highest (NiCoO2, 717mAh/g or 471.4 µAh cm-2 µm-1). This work is devoted to Atomic layer deposition (ALD) of thin-films of nickel-cobalt oxides and evaluating their performance as negative electrodes for solid-state lithium-ion batteries. Ni-Co-O thin films were synthesized with different NiO/CoO ALD cycles ratio (5/1, 3/1, and 1/1) using nickelocene, cobaltocene and oxygen plasma. Both NiO and CoO crystal phases were observed in deposited films. The content of chemical elements (C, O, Ni and Co) in the film’s depth are uniform, except for sample 5/1. The electrochemical performance of synthesized thin films was studied by cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic cycling. It was found that with an increase of the nickel content in the coatings, the electrode's specific capacity is increasing. The highest capacity at high discharge currents (35C) is observed for the sample obtained with NiO/CoO – 5/1 ratio (660 µA·h·µm-1·cm-2)

Keywords: Atomic layer deposition, Nickel-cobalt oxide, lithium-ion batteries, solid-state lithium-ion batteries

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