Thin-film battery
11038209 · 2021-06-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02P70/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01M4/525
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/0585
ELECTRICITY
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01M10/0436
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M10/0585
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/525
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The disclosure concerns a lithium battery comprising, in order, a support, a copper electrode and, in contact with the copper electrode, a layer of a material capable of forming an alloy with lithium. The disclosure further concerns a manufacturing method and a method of putting into service such a battery.
Claims
1. A battery, comprising: a support; a conductive layer on the support, the conductive layer having a first portion and a second portion separated from one another by an aperture; an electrolyte layer on the conductive layer; a copper electrode on the electrolyte layer, the copper electrode contacting the first portion of the conductive layer and contacting the support through the aperture, the electrolyte layer separating the copper electrode from the second portion of the conductive layer; and an alloy-forming layer, of a material capable of forming an alloy with lithium, in contact with the copper electrode.
2. The battery according to claim 1, wherein the material is silicon, germanium, silicon-germanium, tin or aluminum.
3. The battery according to claim 1, further comprising a LiPON electrolyte layer interposed between the copper electrode and a further electrode.
4. The battery according to claim 3, wherein the further electrode is a LiCoO.sub.2 layer.
5. The battery according to claim 3, wherein a first face of the copper electrode is in contact with the alloy-forming layer, and a second face of the copper electrode is facing the electrolyte layer.
6. The battery according to claim 3, wherein the copper electrode is in contact with the electrolyte layer.
7. The battery according to claim 3, wherein the electrolyte layer comprises an accumulation of metallic lithium close to an interface between the electrolyte layer and the copper electrode.
8. The battery according to claim 1, wherein the alloy-forming layer has a thickness between 10 and 50 nm.
9. The battery according to claim 1, wherein the copper electrode has a thickness between 50 nm and 1 μm.
10. The battery according to claim 1, wherein the battery is a thin-film battery.
11. A method, comprising: manufacturing a battery, the manufacturing including: forming a conductive layer on the support, the conductive layer having a first portion and a second portion separated from one another by an aperture; forming an electrolyte layer on the conductive layer, the electrolyte layer contacting the second portion of the conductive layer; forming a copper electrode on the electrolyte layer, the copper electrode contacting the first portion of the conductive layer and contacting the support through the aperture, the electrolyte layer separating the copper electrode from the second portion of the conductive layer; and forming an alloy-forming layer, of a material capable of forming an alloy with lithium, directly on the copper electrode.
12. The method according to claim 11, comprising, before forming the copper electrode: forming a further electrode; and forming an electrolyte layer on the further electrode, wherein forming the copper electrode includes forming the copper electrode directly on the electrolyte layer.
13. The method of claim 11, further comprising: putting the battery into service, the putting including a first charging phase of the battery under a current of at most a few tens of microamperes per square centimeter, for a plurality of hours.
14. A battery, comprising: a support; a conductive layer on the support, the conductive layer having a first portion and a second portion separated from one another by an opening; a positive electrode positioned on the first portion of the conductive layer; electrolyte layer positioned on the positive electrode; a negative electrode formed on the electrolyte layer, the negative electrode including copper and contacting the support though the opening, the electrolyte layer separating the positive electrode from the negative electrode; and an alloy-forming layer, of a material capable of forming an alloy with lithium, in contact with the negative electrode.
15. The battery according to claim 14, wherein the material is silicon, germanium, silicon-germanium, tin or aluminum.
16. The battery according to claim 14, further comprising a first conductive layer positioned between the positive electrode and a substrate, a portion of the first conductive layer being a positive terminal of the battery.
17. The battery according to claim 16, wherein the second portion of the conductive layer is connected to the negative electrode, and is a negative terminal of the battery.
18. The battery according to claim 17, further comprising an encapsulation layer that encapsulates the positive electrode, electrolyte layer, negative electrode, and alloy-forming layer, while leaving exposed the positive and negative terminals.
19. The battery according to claim 17, wherein: the negative electrode extends into the opening and contacts the second portion of the conductive layer; and the electrolyte layer extends into the opening and contacts the first portion of the conductive layer.
20. The battery according to claim 17, further comprising: a first adhesion layer positioned between the first portion of the conductive layer and the substrate; and a second adhesion layer positioned between the second portion of the conductive layer and the substrate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) These features and their advantages, along with others, will be presented in detail in the following description of particular embodiments, provided without limitation and in relation to the appended figures in which:
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(4) The various figures have not been drawn to scale and, in addition, in the various figures, elements that are the same have been referenced by the same references. For the sake of clarity, only those elements which are useful to the comprehension of the described embodiments have been shown and are described in detail. In particular, the production of the various layers forming a battery has not been described in detail, since the embodiments described are compatible with the standard techniques for producing a lithium-free battery. In the following description, when reference is made to qualifiers of relative position, such as the terms “above”, “below”, “upper”, “lower”, etc., or to qualifiers of orientation, such as the terms “horizontal”, “vertical”, etc., reference is being made to the orientation of the figures, it being understood that, in practice, the batteries described may be oriented differently. Unless specified otherwise, the expressions “about”, “substantially” and “in the order of” signify to within 10%, preferably to within 5%.
(5) Furthermore, in the present description, the negative electrode refers to the first metallic layer deposited directly on the electrolyte layer, namely a layer of copper in the case of a battery of lithium-free type (as opposed to a lithium metal layer in the case of a lithium-metal battery).
(6) The battery of
(7) The battery further comprises a layer 110 of a material capable of forming an alloy with lithium, in contact with the surface of the layer 109 opposite the electrolyte layer 107. The layer 110 covers at least partially, preferably entirely, the face of the layer 109 opposite the electrolyte layer 107. Stated otherwise, the battery comprises, in order, the support 101, the copper electrode 109 and the layer 110. For the layer 110, the material capable of forming an alloy with lithium is for example silicon, germanium, tin, aluminum, etc., or a combination of several of these elements, noting that copper does not form an alloy with lithium. The layer 110 is preferably of silicon, germanium or silicon-germanium. The layer 110 may have a thickness comprised between 10 and 50 nm, for example equal to 25 nm.
(8) In the example of
(9) The battery additionally comprises, on the upper face of the support 101, in a peripheral portion of the support that is not covered by the layer 105, a positive (+) contact terminal 113 (to the right of the active portion of the battery in the orientation of
(10) The negative terminal 115 is itself formed by a second conductive layer 103′ that is separated from the cathode current collector 104 and from the positive terminal 113 (so as not to short the battery). The second conductive layer 103′ is formed on a second adhesion layer 111′ that is formed on the substrate 101. In the example shown, the first adhesion layer 111, for example of lithium cobalt oxynitride (LiCoON), forms an interface between the substrate 101 and the layer 103, the cathode current collector 104 and the positive terminal 115 resting on a first portion of the layer 111. Likewise, the second adhesion layer 111′, for example of lithium cobalt oxynitride (LiCoON), forms an interface between the substrate 101 and the layer 103′, the negative terminal 115 resting on a portion of the layer 111′, which is disjoined from the layer 103 to avoid the risk of shorting the battery. 103′,
(11) The adhesion layers 111, 111′ are formed from a single adhesion layer formed directly on the entire upper face of the substrate and the conductive layers 103, 103′ are formed from a single conductive layer formed directly on the entire upper face of the single adhesion layer. An opening 117 is made vertically through the single adhesion layer and the single conductive layer, to thereby form the first and second conductive layers 103, 103′ and the first and second adhesion layers 111, 111′. The opening 117 opens onto the substrate 101, between the negative terminal 115 and the cathode current collector 104, electrically insulates the negative terminal 115 from the cathode current collector 104. The first and second layers 111, 111′ are for example disposed on and in contact with the upper face of the substrate 101, and are respectively in contact with the first and second conductive layers 103, 103′.
(12) The conductive layer 109 covers the upper face of the LiPON layer 107, and extends down to and contacts the negative terminal 115 of the battery, passing over a flank of the active stack (the left-hand flank in the orientation of
(13) In the non-illustrated case where the support 101 is made of a material that can electrically connect the conductive layer 109 to the cathode current collector 104, an insulating layer is provided at the bottom of the opening 117, between the layer 109 and the support 101.
(14) In the example shown, the layer 110 covers a portion of the layer 109 resting on the upper face of the electrolyte layer 107, a portion of the layer 109 disposed on a sidewall of the active stack (the left sidewall in the orientation of
(15) The battery of
(16) By way of example, in order to produce the battery of
(17) Compared to a thin-film battery of lithium-free type that does not include the layer 110, the manufacture of the battery of
(18) When a battery of the type of that of
(19) According to an embodiment, the first charging phase is a fast charge performed by applying a constant voltage in the order of 4.2 V to the terminals of the battery, the current in the battery then reaching values in the order of a few milliamps. This first phase of fast charging usually lasts less than one hour. In this case, thicknesses of the layers 110 and 109 will be adapted with respect to the thickness of the layer 107.
(20) According to another embodiment, the first charging phase is a slow charge under a constant current, for example followed by a fast discharge phase, itself being for example followed by a fast charge phase as described for example in US patent application 2015/0325878, in connection with its FIGS. 2 and 3A to 3D. This first phase of slow charging lasts longer (several tens of hours) than a first phase of fast charging. By way of example, the charge is said to be slow under a constant current when the current per unit of active surface flowing from the cathode current collector 104 to the negative electrode 109 is at most a few tens of microamps per square centimeter, preferably less than 33 μA/cm.sup.2. This is a current for example at least ten times lower than the currents which the batteries of this type are subjected to during a first phase of fast charging.
(21) The inventors have found that the presence of the layer 110 of a material capable of forming an alloy with lithium improves the capacity and the lifetime of a battery of lithium-free type.
(22)
(23) Bars 301, 302 and 303 respectively represent the capacity, after a first charging phase, of a thin-film battery of lithium-metal type, of a battery corresponding to the battery of
(24) The bars 301 and 303 show that the initial capacity of the battery of
(25) Bars 305, 306 and 307 respectively represent the capacity, after 50 charge and discharge cycles, of batteries corresponding to the bars 301, 302 and 303.
(26) The bars 305 and 307 show that, after 50 charge and discharge cycles, the capacity loss of the battery of
(27) Thus, after 50 charge and discharge cycles, the loss of capacity of the lithium-free battery of
(28) A thin-film battery of lithium-free type comprising a layer 110 thus has performance in terms of initial capacity and lifetime which are substantially the same as those of a corresponding battery of lithium-metal type, this performance being better than that of a corresponding battery of lithium-free type in which the layer 110 is omitted.
(29) Particular embodiments have been described. Diverse variants and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. In particular, the embodiments described are not limited to the particular example of a battery structure described with reference to
(30) In addition, the embodiments described are not limited to the examples of dimensions, and in particular of thicknesses of the various layers, mentioned in the present application.
(31) The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments. These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.