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Epitaxial growth of visible to infra-red transparent conducting In2O3 nanodot dispersions and reversible charge storage as a Li-ion battery anode

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posted on 2018-12-03, 12:10 authored by Michal Osiak, W. Khunsin, E. Armstrong, Tadhg Kennedy, C.M. Sotomayor Torres, Kevin M. RyanKevin M. Ryan, Colm O'Dwyer
Unique bimodal distributions of single crystal epitaxially grown In2O3 nanodots on silicon are shown to have excellent IR transparency greater than 87% at IR wavelengths up to 4 mu m without sacrificing transparency in the visible region. These broadband antireflective nanodot dispersions are grown using a two-step metal deposition and oxidation by molecular beam epitaxy, and backscattered diffraction confirms a dominant (111) surface orientation. We detail the growth of a bimodal size distribution that facilitates good surface coverage (80%) while allowing a significant reduction in In2O3 refractive index. This unique dispersion offers excellent surface coverage and three-dimensional volumetric expansion compared to a thin film, and a step reduction in refractive index compared to bulk active materials or randomly porous composites, to more closely match the refractive index of an electrolyte, improving transparency. The (111) surface orientation of the nanodots, when fully ripened, allows minimum lattice mismatch strain between the In2O3 and the Si surface. This helps to circumvent potential interfacial weakening caused by volume contraction due to electrochemical reduction to lithium, or expansion during lithiation. Cycling under potentiodynamic conditions shows that the transparent anode of nanodots reversibly alloys lithium with good Coulombic efficiency, buffered by co-insertion into the silicon substrate. These properties could potentially lead to further development of similarly controlled dispersions of a range of other active materials to give transparent battery electrodes or materials capable of non-destructive in situ spectroscopic characterization during charging and discharging.

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History

Publication

Nantotechnology;24, 065401

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

IRC, SFI

Rights

This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Nanotechnology, copyright © 2013 IOS Publishing after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0957-484/24/6/065401

Language

English

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