Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T23:37:26.428Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Sol-Gel Lithium Silicate Electrolyte Thin Films

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2011

E. Mouchon
Affiliation:
Ceramics Department, and
L. C. Klein
Affiliation:
Ceramics Department, and
V. Picard
Affiliation:
Ceramics Department, and
M. Greenblatt
Affiliation:
Chemistry Department, Rutgers-the State University of New Jersey, P.O. Box 909, Piscataway, NJ 08855–0 909.
Get access

Abstract

For more than a decade, the sol-gel process has been used to prepare lithium silicate gels that have potential applications as solid electrolytes in lithium batteries and electrochromic windows. The interest in these Li2O-SiC2 materials is their fast and stable ionic conductivity from room temperature up to 350°C. Typically these materials have been prepared with 15 mole % Li2O in bulk samples, but rarely in thin films. This work was undertaken to prepare chemically stable lithium silicate thin films with up to 30 mole % Li2O. Lithium nitrate was used as the lithium precursor. Solutions were evaluated for gelling time and homogeneity. Thin films were made by dip coating. After heat treatment at 200, 250 and 300°C, films were characterized for surface quality, thickness and microstructure using electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction analysis and profilometry. Transparency was investigated in the visible range (350–800 nm).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1 Klein, L. C., Ho, S. F., Szu, S-P. and Greenblatt, M., in Applications of Analytical Techniques to the Characterization of Materials, ed. Perry, D. L., Plenum Press, New York, 1991, pp. 101118.Google Scholar
2 Colson, S., Szu, S-P., Klein, L. C. and Tarascon, J.M., Solid State Ionics 46 283 (1991).Google Scholar
3 Creus, R., Sarradin, J. and Ribes, M., Solid State Ionics 53–56 641 (1992).Google Scholar
4 Jones, S. D. and Akridge, J. R., Solid State Ionics 53–56 628 (1992).Google Scholar
5 Barboux, P., Tarascon, J. M., Shokoohi, F. K., J. Solid State Chem. 94 185 (1991).Google Scholar
6 Tarascon, J. M., J. Electrochemical Society 134 1345 (1987).Google Scholar
7 Lampert, C. M. and Granqvist, C. G., SPIE Vol. IS4, 1990.Google Scholar
8 Chemseddine, A., Henry, M. and Livage, J., Rev. Chim. Min. 21 487 (1984).Google Scholar
9 Zhang, J-G., Tracy, C. E., Benson, D. K. and Deb, S. K., J. Mater. Res. 8 2649 (1993).Google Scholar
10 Agrawal, A., Cronin, J.P. and Zang, R., Sol-Gel Optics II, SPIE Vol. 1758 (1992) 330.Google Scholar
11 Bottelberghs, P. H., in Solid Electrolytes. Hagenmuller, P. and van Gool, W., eds. (Academic Press, New York, 1978) pp. 145172.Google Scholar
12 Boilot, J. P. and Colomban, Ph., in Sol-Gel Technology for Thin Films. Fibers. Preforms. Electronics and Specialty Shapes. Ed. Klein, L. C., Noyes Publication, NJ, 1988, p. 303.Google Scholar
13 Livage, J., in Solid State Ionics III, edited by Nazri, G-A., Tarascon, J. M. and Armand, M. (MRS Symp. Proc. Vol. 293, Pittsburgh, PA, 1993) pp. 261271.Google Scholar
14 Szu, S-P., Klein, L. C. and Greenblatt, M., J. Non-Cryst. Solids 121 119 (1990).Google Scholar
15 Szu, S-P., Greenblatt, M. and Klein, L. C., Solid State Ionics 46 291 (1991).Google Scholar
16 LeBars, N. and Klein, L. C., J. Non-Cryst. Solids 122 291 (1990).Google Scholar
17 Klein, L. C., Szu, S. P., Buckley, A. M. and Greenblatt, M., in Nucleation and Crystallization in Glasses ane Liquids, ed. Weinberg, M. (Am. Ceramic Soc, Westerville, OH, 1993) pp. 167171.Google Scholar
18 Klein, L. C., Wakamatsu, H., Szu, S-P. and Greenblatt, M., J. Non-Cryst. Solids 147/148 668 (1992).Google Scholar
19 Ogasawara, T. and Klein, L. C., “Sol-gel electrolytes in lithium batteries”, presented 7th International Workshop on Ceramics from Gels, to appear in J. Sol-Gel Science and Technology (1994).Google Scholar
20 Wang, B., Greenblatt, M., Yan, J. and Wu, Y., “Sol-gel derived (LiCl)2-Al203-Si02 thin film electrolyte”, presented 7th International Workshop on Ceramics from Gels, to appear in J. Sol-Gel Science and Technology (1994).Google Scholar