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Plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition of vanadium phosphate as a lithium-ion battery electrode material

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Vanadium phosphate films were deposited by a new process consisting of sequential exposures to trimethyl phosphate (TMP) plasma, O2 plasma, and either vanadium oxytriisopropoxide [VTIP, OV(O-i-Pr)3] or tetrakisethylmethylamido vanadium [TEMAV, V(NEtMe)4] as the vanadium precursor. At a substrate temperature of 300 °C, the decomposition behavior of these precursors could not be neglected; while VTIP decomposed and thus yielded a plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition process, the author found that the decomposition of the TEMAV precursor was inhibited by the preceding TMP plasma/O2 plasma exposures. The TEMAV process showed linear growth, saturating behavior, and yielded uniform and smooth films; as such, it was regarded as a plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition process. The resulting films had an elastic recoil detection-measured stoichiometry of V1.1PO4.3 with 3% hydrogen and no detectable carbon contamination. They could be electrochemically lithiated and showed desirable properties as lithium-ion battery electrodes in the potential region between 1.4 and 3.6 V versus Li+/Li, including low capacity fading and an excellent rate capability. In a wider potential region, they showed a emarkably high capacity (equivalent to three lithium ions per vanadium atom), at the expense of reduced cyclability.
Journal: Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A
ISSN: 0734-2101
Issue: 4
Volume: 35
Pages: 041513 - 041522
Publication year:2017
BOF-keylabel:yes
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:1
CSS-citation score:1
Authors from:Government, Higher Education
Accessibility:Open