Nanoscale Solid State Batteries Enabled By Thermal Atomic Layer Deposition of a Lithium Polyphosphazene Solid State Electrolyte
Alexander J. Pearse, Thomas E. Schmitt, Elliot J. Fuller, Farid, El-Gabaly, Chuan-Fu Lin, Konstantinos Gerasopoulos, Alexander C. Kozen, A., Alec Talin, Gary Rubloff, Keith E. Gregorcyzck

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel atomic layer deposition process for creating conformal, lithium-conducting solid electrolytes in nanoscale solid state batteries, enabling high-quality, thin, flexible energy storage devices.
Contribution
It introduces a new ALD method for LiPON-based electrolytes with high ionic conductivity and stability, suitable for ultra-thin and flexible solid state batteries.
Findings
Achieved ionic conductivity of 6.51×10^{-7} S/cm at 35°C.
Demonstrated integration into full solid state batteries with LiCoO₂ and Si.
Fabricated and operated batteries with electrolytes thinner than 100 nm.
Abstract
Several active areas of research in novel energy storage technologies, including three-dimensional solid state batteries and passivation coatings for reactive battery electrode components, require conformal solid state electrolytes. We describe an atomic layer deposition (ALD) process for a member of the lithium phosphorus oxynitride (LiPON) family, which is employed as a thin film lithium-conducting solid electrolyte. The reaction between lithium tert-butoxide (LiOBu) and diethyl phosphoramidate (DEPA) produces conformal, ionically conductive thin films with a stoichiometry close to LiPON between 250 and 300C. The P/N ratio of the films is always 1, indicative of a particular polymorph of LiPON which closely resembles a polyphosphazene. Films grown at 300C have an ionic conductivity of S/cm at 35C, and are functionally…
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