Charge assisted spray deposition method and apparatus
10654056 ยท 2020-05-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B05B5/032
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B5/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B05D1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B5/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B7/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A deposition method includes: (1) providing a nozzle structure including: (a) at least one corona generator having an elongated charge emitting surface; and (b) at least one aerosol channel adapted to guide an aerosol along a flow path past the at least one corona generator; (2) generating an aerosol of a precursor solution; (3) applying to the at least one corona generator a positive or negative voltage of 1 kV-100 kV with respect to the substrate to generate a corona; and (4) flowing the aerosol through the at least one aerosol channel, along the flow path near the at least one corona generator and toward the surface of the substrate so as to charge the aerosol with ions emitted from the at least one corona generator to form charged droplets which are attracted to and deposited on the substrate, wherein the elongated charge emitting surface is a wire or blade edge, which is substantially parallel to the surface of the substrate and substantially perpendicular to the flow path, provided that the at least one corona generator does not consist of two blades. Inventive nozzle structures are also described.
Claims
1. A method for providing a material on a surface of a substrate, comprising the steps of: providing a precursor solution comprising at least one precursor material in a liquid; providing a nozzle structure comprising at least one corona generator having an elongated charge emitting surface which is positioned substantially parallel to the surface of the substrate, wherein the at least one corona generator does not consist of two blades; supplying the precursor solution to the nozzle structure; generating an aerosol of the precursor solution in the nozzle structure, wherein the aerosol comprises a plurality of precursor solution droplets suspended within a carrier gas; applying to the at least one corona generator a positive or negative voltage of 1 kV-100 kV with respect to the substrate to generate a corona; guiding the aerosol along a flow path substantially perpendicular to the elongated charge emitting surface and sufficiently near the at least one corona generator such that the aerosol is charged with ions emitted from the at least one corona generator to form charged droplets in the aerosol, wherein the at least one corona generator is located outside the flow path; emitting the aerosol containing the charged droplets from the nozzle structure along a single straight flow path substantially perpendicular to the surface of the substrate, wherein the aerosol is shaped by a spreader of the nozzle structure to make a density of the aerosol uniform along a length of the nozzle structure; applying a voltage to the surface of the substrate to attract the charged droplets thereto; depositing the charged droplets onto the surface of the substrate heated to a temperature of 100-700 C.; and forming a solid form of the material to be provided on the surface of the substrate, wherein the solid form of the material is uniformly coated on the surface.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one corona generator is a wire which is 10 m-10 mm in diameter.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one corona generator comprises two wires each of which is 10 m-10 mm in diameter.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one corona generator comprises a blade at an angle of 0-90 with respect to the substrate surface and optionally covered with a non-conductive material everywhere other than the cutting edge.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one corona generator is continuously or periodically moved along its length so that a portion of the at least one corona generator outside of a deposition area can be cleaned without affecting deposition.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein a shroud gas is blown over the at least one corona generator towards the substrate to prevent the aerosol and a backflow thereof from flowing into and contaminating the at least one corona generator.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate comprises glass, silicon or metal.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the solid form is a film with a thickness of 220-400 nm and a peak to valley roughness of less than 50 nm.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the aerosol is generated from the precursor solution using a pneumatic, hydraulic, ultrasonic, vibrating mesh, or other atomizing techniques.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the precursor solution droplets have an average diameter of 50 nm to 50 m.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the average diameter of the precursor solution droplets is 200 nm to 10 m.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the carrier gas comprises at least one gas selected from the group consisting of air, N.sub.2, Ar, O.sub.2, H.sub.2, He, and combinations thereof.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the nozzle structure is composed of an electrically insulating material.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein a plurality of hooks is provided to hold and reduce vibration of the at least one corona generator.
15. The method of claim 1, wherein a metallic roller or metallic brush is used on a back side of the substrate to establish an electrical connection to the substrate surface to which the voltage is applied.
16. The method of claim 1, wherein a gas shroud is provided along an inside wall of the at least one aerosol channel to reduce a number of droplets that hit an inside wall thereof.
17. The method of claim 1, wherein an upper portion of the nozzle structure is bent such that droplets landing on walls of the nozzle structure flow away from an aerosol emitting orifice by gravity.
18. The method of claim 1, wherein a lower portion of the nozzle structure has a shroud gas flow to reduce a number of droplets landing on walls of the nozzle structure.
19. The method of claim 1, wherein at least one neutralizing corona generator is provided 1 cm to 1 m away from the at least one corona generator and biased to a voltage having an opposite polarity as that of the nozzle structure, such that charges generated are approximately equal and opposite to charges generated from the nozzle structure, leading to a neutralized charge balance on the substrate surface.
20. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate is coated with a conductive material.
21. The method of claim 1, wherein the material provided on the surface of the substrate comprises WO.sub.3, Aluminum-doped Zinc Oxide or Indium Tin Oxide.
22. The method of claim 1, wherein the aerosol is shaped into an elongated rectangle as it exits the nozzle.
23. A method for providing a material on a surface of a substrate, comprising the steps of: providing a precursor solution comprising at least one precursor material in a liquid; providing a nozzle structure comprising at least one corona generator having an elongated charge emitting surface which is positioned parallel to the surface of the substrate, wherein the at least one corona generator does not consist of two blades; supplying the precursor solution to the nozzle structure; generating an aerosol of the precursor solution in the nozzle structure, wherein the aerosol comprises a plurality of precursor solution droplets suspended within a carrier gas; applying to the at least one corona generator a positive or negative voltage of 1 kV-100 kV with respect to the substrate to generate a corona; guiding the aerosol along a flow path perpendicular to the elongated charge emitting surface and sufficiently near the at least one corona generator such that the aerosol is charged with ions emitted from the at least one corona generator to form charged droplets in the aerosol, wherein the at least one corona generator is located outside the flow path; emitting the aerosol containing the charged droplets from the nozzle structure along a single straight flow path perpendicular to the surface of the substrate, wherein the aerosol is shaped by a spreader of the nozzle structure to make a density of the aerosol uniform along a length of the nozzle structure; applying a voltage to the surface of the substrate to attract the charged droplets thereto; depositing the charged droplets onto the surface of the substrate heated to a temperature of 100-700 C.; and forming a solid form of the material to be provided on the surface of the substrate, wherein the solid form of the material is uniformly coated on the surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be described in conjunction with the following drawings in which like reference numerals designate like elements and wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(12) We introduce a new and improved electrospray technique that we name the Charge Assisted Spray Deposition (CASP) Technique and corresponding nozzle structures that can deposit films that are uniform, fast, independent of the electrical characteristics of the precursor, high efficiency, and low cost.
(13) Nozzle Structure
(14) A nozzle structure in accordance with the invention comprises an aerosol source section, an aerosol spreader section, a charge generating section, an optional shroud gas section and an optional snout section.
(15) The aerosol source section includes at least one atomizing unit (atomizer). An aerosol can be generated from a precursor solution using pneumatic, hydraulic, ultrasonic, vibrating mesh, or other atomizing techniques.
(16) A carrier gas is used to carry the droplets forward through the rest of the nozzle structure, exiting at least one orifice, such as, e.g., two identical orifices. Each orifice is preferably rectangular with a width from 0.01 mm to 1 m (more preferably 0.1 mm to 100 mm) and a length from 10 mm to 100 m (preferably from 100 mm to 10 m). In the case of two orifices, the two orifices are oriented preferably opposite to and at an angle of about 45 degrees with respect to the surface of the substrate. Carrier gases can be air, nitrogen, argon, oxygen, hydrogen, helium, xenon, carbon dioxide, water vapor, alcohol vapor, or combination.
(17) Referring to
(18) The thin edge of the wedge leads into a thin rectangular guide to continue the spreading to make the aerosol density uniform along the length of the nozzle.
(19) Optionally, most of the spreading portion of the nozzle can be slanted and positioned so that aerosol droplets landing on the wall flow back via gravity into the precursor source. See, e.g.,
(20) The charge generating section comprises at least one corona generator (e.g., corona wire 50 of
(21) The wire (or blade) is placed in the middle channel of the nozzle, as shown, e.g., in
(22) The wire or blade is thin enough (from 100 nm to 10 cm, preferably from 1000 nm to 1 cm, in diameter of curvature) to generate a corona discharge with an applied voltage (preferably 1-1000 kV, more preferably 5-100 kV).
(23) There may be several hooks to hold the wires (or blades) and reduce vibration.
(24) The shroud gas section of the nozzle structure is optional.
(25) Shroud gases can be air, nitrogen, argon, oxygen, hydrogen, helium, xenon, carbon dioxide, water vapor, alcohol vapor, or combination.
(26) The snout section of the nozzle structure is optional. As shown in, e.g.,
(27) Optionally, cooling mechanisms can be added to the orifice and/or the snout when the substrate is heated to above room temperature.
(28) The invention will be illustrated in more detail with reference to the following Examples, but it should be understood that the present invention is not deemed to be limited thereto.
EXAMPLES
Example 1
(29) A thin film can be deposited on a substrate by the following procedure. Referring to
(30) A precursor solution of tungsten chloride WCl.sub.6 is prepared by diluting WCl.sub.6 in 50% ethanol and 50% water at a concentration between 0.01M and 0.1M.
(31) The precursor solution is aerosolized with standard commercial atomizers.
(32) Using nitrogen as a carrier gas, the aerosol is moved through the tubes into the nozzle which makes it uniform and flattened upon exit from the orifice.
(33) A voltage from +10 kV to +100 kV is applied to the wires (or blades) to produce corona discharges. The ions generated charge the aerosol droplets most of which are then attracted to the grounded substrate. On the substrate surface, the droplets dry up as chemical reactions take place to form a film. The non-charged or inadequately charged droplets and byproducts are swept away by exhaust ducts placed close to the nozzle.
(34) Deposition was conducted in accordance with the foregoing procedure.
Example 2
(35) A glass substrate is placed on a grounded metal support about 10 mm and 50 mm from the wires. The substrate and its support can optionally be moved with respect to the nozzle, at a speed between 2 cm/min and 10 m/min. The substrate is heated to a temperature of 500-700 C.
(36) An aluminum doped zinc oxide (AZO) precursor solution is prepared as follows. Zinc acetate dehydrate is dissolved in 2-methoxyethanol at a concentration of 0.75M. Ethanolamine (MEA) is added at a molar ratio of one MEA mole per one Zn mole where MEA acts as a complexion agent to keep the metal ions in homogeneous solution without precipitation. The resulting solution is stirred in a water bath at 70 C. for 2 hours using a magnetic stirrer. Aluminum nitrate is added at a molar ratio of 0.01-0.03 Al to 1 Zn, and the solution is stirred for another hour.
(37) The precursor solution is aerosolized with standard commercial atomizers.
(38) Using nitrogen as a carrier gas, the aerosol is passed through the tubes into the nozzle which makes it uniform and flattened upon exit from the orifice.
(39) A voltage from +10 kV to +100 kV is applied to the wires (or blades) to produce corona discharges. The ions generated charge the aerosol droplets most of which are then attracted to the grounded substrate. On the substrate surface, the droplets dry up as chemical reactions take place to form a film. The non-charged or inadequately charged droplets and byproducts are swept away by exhaust ducts close to the nozzle.
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(41) While the invention has been described in detail and with reference to specific examples thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.