Metallic surface with karstified relief, forming same, and high surface area metallic electrochemical interface
10522300 ยท 2019-12-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01M4/136
ELECTRICITY
B23K2103/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/0823
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/0006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C23C14/028
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B23K26/0624
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/12431
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
B23K2101/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
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
H01M4/1391
ELECTRICITY
H01G11/26
ELECTRICITY
B23K26/0876
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02E60/13
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
B23K26/0846
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01G11/24
ELECTRICITY
Y10T428/12472
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
International classification
B21D39/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01G11/26
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/1391
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/136
ELECTRICITY
B23K26/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K26/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A metal foil with a karstified topography having a surface morphology in which a maximum peak height minus a maximum profile depth is greater than 0.5 m and extends into the surface at least 5% of the foil thickness, a root mean square roughness is at least about 0.2 m measured in a direction of greatest roughness, and an oxygen abundance is less than 5 atomic %. The foil may be composed of aluminum, titanium, nickel, copper, or stainless steel, or an alloy of any thereof, and may have a coating composed of nickel, nickel alloy, titanium, titanium alloy, nickel oxide, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, indium tin oxide, or carbon, or a mixture or composite of any thereof. The foil may form part of a metal electrode, current collector, or electrochemical interface. Further described is a method for producing the foil by laser ablation in a vacuum.
Claims
1. A method for producing a metal foil less than 0.5 mm thick, the metal foil having a karstified topography having a surface morphology in which a maximum peak height minus a maximum profile depth is greater than 0.5 m and extends into the surface at least 5% of the foil thickness, a root mean square roughness is at least about 0.2 m measured in a direction of greatest roughness, and an oxygen abundance is less than 5 atomic %, the method comprising: providing a metal foil with a thickness less than 0.5 mm, retained in place within a vacuum chamber; evacuating the chamber to a pressure less than 710.sup.3 Pa; and applying a high power laser radiation to the surface of the metal foil, the radiation having an irradiance sufficient to ablate the metal, leaving the karstified topography on the surface of the metal foil.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein: the surface morphology has a height distribution that is at least approximately Gaussian, a skewness less than +/1.5, and a kurtosis in a range of 2-11; profiles of the surface morphology, defined as a height of the surface along a line segment in a plane of the surface, establish that a mean separation of peaks and valleys is less than 50 microns; or profiles of the surface morphology, defined as a height of the surface along a line segment in a plane of the surface, establish that at least 5% of the slope of the profiles are greater than 5 or less than 5.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the maximum profile depth is at least 2% of the foil thickness.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the foil is composed of a metal that naturally forms an oxide that has a higher electrical resistance than the metal, and the method further comprises applying a passivating layer onto the karstified topography, the passivating layer having a higher electrical conductivity and/or corrosion resistance than that of the oxide.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein applying the passivating layer comprises depositing the passivating layer in the vacuum chamber.
6. The method of claim 4 wherein applying the passivating layer comprises applying a physical vapour deposition (PVD) process.
7. The method of claim 4 wherein applying the passivating layer comprises applying a pulsed laser deposition process that uses a same laser as was used to produce the karstified topography.
8. The method of claim 4 wherein the foil is composed of Al, Ni, Ti, Cu, or stainless steel or an alloy or mixture of any two or more thereof, and the passivating layer is composed of one or more metals, one or more alloys, carbon, a carbon metal composite, or one or more metal oxides, or any combination of two or more thereof.
9. The method of claim 3 wherein providing the foil comprises mounting a foil to a reel-to-reel system within the vacuum chamber.
10. The method of claim 3 wherein the foil is 0.01-0.2 mm thick or 0.020-0.050 mm thick.
11. The method of claim 1 wherein applying a high power laser radiation pattern to the surface comprises: moving one or more lasers, or optical components for redirecting a beam from the one or more lasers, with respect to the surface to produce a time-varying high power electromagnetic radiation pattern; moving one or more lasers that are located outside of the vacuum chamber with respect to a window of the vacuum chamber; operating a short pulse, high energy laser with focusing optics to focus the energy to achieve high spatio-temporal focusing of the electromagnetic radiation; operating a femtosecond laser; operating a picosecond laser; operating a nanosecond laser; operating an eximer laser; or operating a Q-switched Nd-YAG solid state laser.
12. A metal foil less than 0.5 mm thick, the metal foil having a karstified topography having a surface morphology in which: a maximum peak height minus a maximum profile depth is greater than 0.5 m and extends into the surface at least 5% of the foil thickness; a root mean square roughness is at least about 0.2 m measured in a direction of greatest roughness; and an oxygen abundance is less than 5 atomic %.
13. The foil of claim 12 wherein profiles of the surface morphology, defined as a height of the surface along a line segment in a plane of the surface, establish that a mean separation of peaks and valleys is less than 50 microns.
14. The foil of claim 13 wherein the profiles establish that at least 5% of the slope of the profiles are greater than 5 or less than 5.
15. The foil of claim 12 wherein the surface morphology has a height distribution that is at least approximately Gaussian, has a skewness less than +/1.5, and a kurtosis in a range of 2-11.
16. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil is composed of a metal or alloy that resists corrosion and is electrically conductive.
17. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil is composed of Al, an Al alloy, stainless steel, Cu, Ag, Ni, Ti, or a mixture or alloy of any two or more thereof.
18. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil is coated with a metal, alloy, carbon, carbon metal composite or metal oxide that resists oxidation/corrosion and/or is electrically conductive.
19. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil is composed of Al, an Al alloy, Cu, or a Cu alloy, and has a coating of a metal, alloy, carbon, carbon metal composite, metal oxide, or a combination of any two or more thereof.
20. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil is composed of Al, an Al alloy, Cu, or a Cu alloy, and has a coating of nickel, a nickel alloy, titanium, a titanium alloy, carbon, a carbon metal composite, nickel oxide, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, or indium tin oxide, or a mixture of any two or more thereof.
21. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil thickness is less than 0.5 mm and the maximum peak height minus maximum profile depth is more than 5% of the foil thickness.
22. The foil of claim 12, the foil being comprised within an electrochemical interface and having a first face facing an active material, the first face bearing the karstified topography.
23. The foil of claim 22 wherein profiles of the surface morphology, defined as a height of the surface along a line segment in a plane of the surface, establish that a mean separation of peaks and valleys is less than 50 microns.
24. The foil of claim 23 wherein the profiles establish that at least 5% of the slope of the profiles are greater than 5 or less than 5.
25. The foil of claim 22 wherein the surface morphology has a height distribution that is at least approximately Gaussian, has a skewness less than +/1.5, and a kurtosis in a range of 2-11.
26. The foil of claim 22 wherein the foil is composed of a metal or alloy that resists corrosion and is electrically conductive.
27. The foil of claim 22 wherein the foil is coated with a metal, alloy, carbon, carbon metal composite, or metal oxide that resists corrosion and is electrically conductive.
28. The foil of claim 22 wherein the foil is less than 0.5 mm thick, 0.01-0.2 mm thick, or 0.020-0.050 mm thick, and the maximum peak height minus maximum profile depth is 5-50% of the foil thickness.
29. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil thickness is 0.01-0.2 mm and the maximum peak height minus maximum profile depth is more than 5% of the foil thickness.
30. The foil of claim 12 wherein the foil thickness is 0.020-0.050 mm and the maximum peak height minus maximum profile depth is more than 5% of the foil thickness.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In order that the invention may be more clearly understood, embodiments thereof will now be described in detail by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(19) Herein a technique for karstification of metal foils is described. The technique involves vacuum laser ablation of the foil. Advantageously, the foil can be composed of a lower cost metal or alloy, such as Al, Cu, Ni, Ti, stainless steel, or alloys or mixtures of one or more thereof, that tend to form a lower electrical conductivity surface oxide coating, and the karstified foil can be coated with a passivating layer that precludes formation of such a surface coating, while still in the vacuum, whereby a metal foil with a passivated, karstified surface can be produced with reduced oxide content between the passivation coating and foil. The vacuum laser ablation produces a karstified topography on the surface with a surface morphology in which: a maximum peak height minus a maximum profile depth is greater than 0.5 m; a root mean square roughness is at least about 0.2 m; and an oxygen abundance is less than atomic 5%. Preferably the surface morphology has a height distribution that is at least approximately Gaussian, has a skewness less than +/1.5, and a kurtosis in a range of 2-11. Profiles of the surface morphology, defined as a height of the surface along a line segment in a plane of the surface, preferably show that a mean separation of peaks and valleys is less than 50 microns. More preferably the mean separation is less than 5 microns. Furthermore, the profiles preferably show that at least 5% of the slope of the profiles are greater than 5 or less than 5, and thus include regions that are rising or falling steeply. Preferably less than least 5% of the slope distribution is greater than 10 and less than 10.
(20)
(21) The metal foil 14 will be understood to have a thickness less than 1 mm, such as a thickness of 10-800 microns, more preferably from 11-600 microns, 12-500 microns, or 12-150 microns, and most commonly from 15-55 microns. The metal foil may be composed of an alloy, or other compounded foil such as an intermetallic foil, and may initially have a native oxide surface layer, for example. The metal foil may be composed principally of aluminum, copper, or titanium, nickel, alloys of them and in principle can be composed of silver, gold, or of any noble metal. The metal foil may be Al or an alloy thereof, or a steel, such as stainless steel, or titanium or an alloy thereof, or nickel or an alloy thereof. Copper, steel, titanium, nickel and Al (and their alloys) are particularly valuable as current collectors in batteries, supercapacitors, and other electrochemical cells, as well as in noble metal catalyst applications, or gas phase chemical reactions. The karstification of more expensive noble metal foils, or lower cost metal foils coated with more expensive noble metal, may have advantages over noble metal particles used in some applications, where localization of the noble metal is critical.
(22) An optical system 12 is provided for generating an laser beam that is adapted to distribute power to ablate an exposed surface of the foil 14 with a pattern that is defined spatially and temporally. While
(23)
(24) It will be appreciated that tensioning and tension-reducing roller arrangements, and various supports, may be used to support the foil during the ablation/karstification, especially if the foil is more fragile. Furthermore thermal control equipment may be used to limit a warping or distortion of the foil due to a heating of the foil during the ablation.
(25) The karstified surface of the foil 14 is then subjected to a deposition process, where a passivating layer is applied thereto. This is shown performed by a laser ablation process initiated by a laser beam striking a target 19 to eject a plume 18 of a material that gets deposited onto the karstified surface of the foil 14. It is well known in the art how to deposit plasma, gas, and particulate matter in a vacuum chamber according to such processes as chemical vapor deposition (CVD), physical vapor deposition (PVD). Herein CVD refers to a set of deposition processes specifically including Atmospheric pressure CVD (APCVD), Low-pressure CVD (LPCVD), Ultrahigh vacuum CVD (UHVCVD), Microwave plasma-assisted CVD (MPCVD), Plasma-Enhanced CVD (PECVD), Combustion Chemical Vapor Deposition (CCVD), and Photo-initiated CVD (PICVD). PVD includes cathodic arc deposition, electron beam PVD, evaporative deposition, sputtering deposition, and pulsed laser deposition.
(26) An advantage of the illustrated arrangement using a roller to separate ablation processes (plume 16) from deposition processes (plume 18), include a continuous, or substantially continuous process for karstifying and passivating foil surfaces. The continuous process may be provided in parallel, intermittently, or serially in that: one area of the foil may be karstified while a previously karstified area is coated; one area may be karstified, and then a previously karstified area is coated, followed by karstification of a next area; or the whole foil may be unwound for karstification followed by a rewinding for coating. Thus it is possible to use a same laser such as high power pulsed laser, for both karstification and deposition, where appropriate.
(27) A method of the present invention is presented as a flow chart in
(28) Placing the foil into the vacuum chamber 20 may require supporting the foil in place, which can be accomplished using a variety of roll-to-roll forming equipment well known in the art. It is known in the art how to produce and operate roll-to-roll forming equipment in vacuum chambers, such as those offered by Mustang Vaccum of Sarasota, Fla., or Picosun of Detroit, Mi.
(29) Evacuating the chamber may involve applying a vacuum pump (step 22), as is well known in the art. Methods for inserting rolls of foils into and removing them from, a vacuum chamber with minimal entrainment of air, are known in the art, and would typically be used to minimize the work, energy and time required to achieve the desired vacuum. The desired vacuum will depend on a variety of properties of the materials and the ablation process, but will generally be at least 1.310.sup.2 Pa, and more preferably from 1.310.sup.3-1.310.sup.6, for most foils and processes. The principal advantage of achieving such a vacuum is the karstification of the surface under laser ablation without causing, or with minimal, surface oxidation.
(30) Applying the pattern of laser radiation (step 24) may comprise operating one or more light sources. Preferably a short-pulse laser, such as nanosecond, sub-nanosecond, picosecond or femtosecond laser is used so that the energy supplied to a point on the surface of the foil at an instant can be very high, while limiting an amount of heat applied to the foil, as heat tends to warp foils under tension. Short-pulsed Q-Switched Diode-Pumped Solid-State Lasers are known lasers adapted to build up laser power between pulses and delivering high power pulses. Excimer lasers are also able to develop high energy density and can be used to deliver this energy over a very localized space and time.
(31) The optional step 26 of depositing a passivating layer may be performed by depositing a coating onto the karstified foil without removal of the foil from the vacuum chamber, using known multi-compartment vacuum chambers. Advantageously a same optical power source can be used for ablating a target if the passivating layer is applied by pulse laser deposition, or a like technique. Deposition of plasma, gas, and particulate matter in a vacuum chamber according to such processes as CVD, and PVD, including sputtering, magnetron sputtering, pulsed laser deposition, thermal evaporation, Cathodic arc deposition and electron beam evaporation are well known in the art, and may be suitable for particular applications.
Example 1
Karstification with Solid State Q-Switched Laser
(32) Applicant has demonstrated surface karstification by vacuum laser ablation of metallic foils. The experimental set-up for karstification included a high-vacuum stainless steel chamber with a glass cover to allow a laser beam to pass through it; a Spectra-Physics diode pumped solid state Q-switched laser (Model J40-BL6-106Q) operating at 1064 nm wavelength, with a power >5.0 W, energy per pulse >140 J, repetition rate of 1-150 kHz; an Aerotech X-Y-Z 3-axis motion stage to which the laser was mounted, conventional laser beam focusing optics (focusing the beam to 30 m diameter), and sample foils (commercial grade 316 stainless steel (75 and 50 micron), aluminum foils 500, 50, 25 micron thick, and copper 25 and 50 microns) were chosen and mechanically mounted on a smooth ceramic support disc within the vacuum). The vacuum chamber was pumped down to very high vacuum level (510.sup.7 Torr, although 0.5-110.sup.5 Torr has been found to be sufficient for Al; 1-510.sup.5 Torr for Cu; and 510.sup.5 Torr for stainless steel) using a turbo pump and a mechanical pump. The laser beam was focused onto the surface of stainless steel, aluminum, or copper foils by means of a focal length lens and z axis motion stage. The laser beam was scanned on the foil surface in x and y directions during the karstification process. The x, y and z axes motion of the laser beam was controlled by the Aerotech X-Y-Z 3-axis motion stage with its associated software. The x-y-z motion stage was controlled to scan the large surface of metal foils to karstify the surface over (9 cm.sup.2, 25 cm.sup.2 or 100 cm.sup.2). The scan rate was about 200 mm/min, the pulse rate was 500-10 kHz, the pulse width was 6 ns.
(33) Table 1 below lists the laser parameters that were varied to produce the respective karstifications micrographed in
(34) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 SEM Diode laser Pulse Energy FIG. drive current Repetition Power Energy density per Number (A) rate (Hz) (w) (J) pulse (J/cm.sup.2) 4A 20 500 0.052 104 0.035 4B 20 1000 0.101 101 0.034 4C 20 5000 0.490 98 0.033 4D 20 10000 1.24 124 0.041 4E 25 500 0.081 162 0.054 4F 25 1000 0.154 154 0.051 4G 25 5000 0.722 144 0.048 4H 25 10000 1.35 135 0.045 4I 30 100 0.066 660 0.22 4J 30 500 0.133 266 0.089 4K 30 1000 0.210 219 0.073 4L 30 5000 0.875 175 0.058
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(37) The surface was analyzed by Wyko Optical profilometry along two lines: a horizontal line lying in a valley and a vertical line that crossed valleys and ridges. Along the valley (horizontal line y=16.60 m of the legend) there is considerable depth variation, and a very high surface length. A mean separation of local peaks and valleys is clearly less than 5 m and an absolute value of the slope at at least 20% of points is very high (more than 5). The vertical line (x=78.16 m of the legend) exhibited higher variations, and a smoother overall large-scale pattern. A mean separation of local peaks and valleys is clearly less than 2 m and an absolute value of the slope at at least 10% of points is very high (more than 5).
(38) Table 2 below lists the surface roughness parameters that were measured on the karstifications micrographed of the surface produced using the parameters of
(39) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Root mean Maximum Maximum Karstified square height Maximum profile Al surface roughness Roughness of the profile peak depth profile R.sub.q average R.sub.a surface R.sub.t height R.sub.p R.sub.v Along the 0.49 m 0.40 m 2.41 m 0.77 m 3.18 m valley Across 1.85 m 1.62 m 8.10 m 5.26 m 2.84 m ridges- valleys Along the 0.88 m 0.70 m 4.67 m 4.70 m 0.03 m ridge
(40) The depth of laser roughening of the 50 m Al foil at
(41) Oxidation
(42) A karstified Al foil was examined by energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX) to assess the oxidation of a karstified foil. Results of the examination are shown in table 3. The oxygen atomic percentage was found to be less than 3.21 atomic % as detected on the machined area by the EDX method, indicating that the laser surface karstification process only slightly oxidized the aluminum surface. Table 3 below lists the weight % and atomic % of the machined area of karstified Al foil shown in the micrograph of
(43) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Element Weight % Atomic % OK 1.93 3.21 AlK 98.07 96.79
(44) Supercapacitor and Li-Ion Battery Cells Resistance Testing
(45) The vacuum laser karstified Al foils were used as current collectors, and were tested in supercapacitor cells, in order to assess any change in performance in the internal resistance of the cells produced by substituting the karstified surface with a smooth electrode. A typical supercapacitor is composed of a separator film covered on both sides by an electrode active material, and two metallic current collectors on opposite sides of the separator film, such that the active material and separator film are sandwiched between the two metallic current collectors.
(46) Kuraray RP20 was used as the electrode active material (electrode formulation: 85 wt % RP20, 10 wt % Ketjenblack EC600JD (from FIPZ Chem) and 5 wt % polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) as a binder). The thickness of the pastes was 1002 m after pressing. It was punched at 16 mm diameter, and dried at 120 C. under active vacuum for at least 48 h. Fabrication of the test cells involved a hydraulic press used to press the active material into the Al foil with a load of 10,000 lbs for 30 s at 100 C. The 50 m thick Al foils were karstified (or not) as described above with the process parameters associated with
(47) Impedance spectroscopy (using 10 mV amplitude and 10 mHz-0.2 MHz frequency) was first used to analyze the internal resistance of the button cells.
(48) The karstification of the current collectors had a strong influence on the size of the semi-circle (which is caused by the ohmic barrier of the alumina (Al.sub.2O.sub.3) insulating layer present at the aluminum surface and it is directly proportional to the interfacial charge transfer resistance). The karstified Al current collectors display much smaller semi-circle indicating lower interfacial resistance than the unkarstified Al reference collector. The intercepts of semi-circle with Z axis were 3.7 and 50, respectively for supercapacitor cells with karstified and unkarstified Al current collectors.
(49) Cyclic Voltammetry
(50) In order to further characterize the performances of karstified Al foils as current collectors, charge-discharge cycles were carried out using cyclic voltammetry at different scan rates. The cyclic voltammograms (not shown) of the button cell with the karstified Al current collectors displayed more quasi-perfect rectangular shapes at low scan rates than that of the button cell with unkarstified Al current collectors, as is expected from double-layer capacitors. The specific capacitances obtained from cyclic voltammograms at different scan rates was shown in
(51) Li-Ion Battery Cell Tests
(52) The 50 m thick laser karstified Al foils (with
(53) Impedance spectroscopy was used again to analyze the internal resistance of the Li-ion battery cathode cell. It was found that karstification of the Al current collectors decreases significantly the cell resistance. After 10 charging/discharging cycles at one tenth of cell Capacity (10C/10 cycles), the resistance taken from the semi-circle of impedance spectroscopy Nyquist plots (not shown here) for the LiFePO.sub.4 cathode cell with unkarstified Al foils is 90, while for the cell with karstified Al foils the resistance is 13. After 20 days of charging/discharging cycles, the resistance of the unkarstified cell had increased to 150, whereas the karstified cell had only increased to 20. The karstification of the Al current collectors significantly enhances the electronic contact between the LiFePO.sub.4 active layer and the Al collector and allows an enhanced power output of the cell.
Example 2
Karstification with Excimer Laser
(54) Applicant has also demonstrated surface karstification of metallic foils using vacuum laser ablation with an excimer laser operating using the experimental setup shown in
(55) Scanning electron micrographs of the karstified surfaces of the AISI 136L stainless steel and aluminum foils (250 m thick) produced by karstification with a KrF excimer laser using parameters described above are shown in
(56) Table 4 below lists the surface roughness parameters that were measured on the karstifications micrographed in
(57) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Root mean square Maximum Maximum Maximum karstified roughness Roughness height of the profile peak profile depth surface R.sub.q average R.sub.a surface R.sub.t height R.sub.p R.sub.v Al (X profile) 6.01 m 4.91 m 30.16 m 14.58 m 15.58 m Al (Y profile) 6.52 m 5.33 m 34.31 m 19.38 m 14.93 m Stainless 2.30 m 1.73 m 15.94 m 5.48 m 10.46 m steel (X profile) Stainless 2.25 m 1.64 m 16.30 m 9.08 m 7.22 m steel (Y profile)
(58) The depth of laser roughening of the 250 m Al at
(59) Similar to the diode pumped solid state Q-switched laser, the excimer laser was able to create micro-/submicro-structured surfaces on both stainless steel and aluminum foils without damaging the foils. Excimer laser ablation of aluminum foils created deeper karstification than on the AISI 136L stainless steel at the same laser processing parameters such as power density, energy density, repetition rate and processing time, as evident in comparing
(60) Oxidation
(61) The karstified Al and AISI 136L stainless steel foils prepared by the excimer laser were also examined by energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX) to assess the oxidation of the karstified foils. The oxygen atomic percentage was found to be less than 1.6 atomic % for Al foils and less than 2.7 atomic % for AISI 136L stainless steel foils as detected on the machined area by the EDX method, indicating that the laser karstification process only slightly oxidized the aluminum and stainless steel surfaces.
(62) The excimer laser karstified Al and AISI 136L stainless steel foils were used as current collectors, and were tested in supercapacitor cells, in order to assess the performance improvement in the internal resistance of the cells produced by the karstification. Kuraray RP20 was used as the active material (electrode formulation: 85 wt % RP20, 10 wt % Ketjenblack (from FIPZ Chem) and 5 wt % PTFE applied to the current collector). The thickness of the pastes was 1002 m after pressing. The active material was assembled using a Gore separator, a 0.5 M Na.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous electrolyte, and different current collectors (either aluminum or AISI 136L stainless steel, either karstified or unkarstified, for both anode and cathode) in a typical supercapacitor cell in which the two electrodes and the in-between separator film is sandwiched by two metallic back plates with a load of 9-10 pounds. Unkarstified Al and stainless steel foils were used to assemble a control cell for comparison.
(63)
(64) TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 Karstified Unkarstified ref. stainless stainless steel Unkarstified ref. steel Karstified Al collectors Al collectors collectors collectors Cell resistance 16.2 .Math. cm.sup.2 10.0 .Math. cm.sup.2 6.3 .Math. cm.sup.2 2.2 .Math. cm.sup.2 of fresh cell Cell resistance 6.0 .Math. cm.sup.2 4.5 .Math. cm.sup.2 2.4 .Math. cm.sup.2 1.2 .Math. cm.sup.2 after 5000 charging/ discharging cycles
(65) Passivation
(66) Al is the most common material for current collectors used in energy storage devices such as batteries and supercapacitors, but it's liability to surface oxidation and consequent formation of an insulating layer is problematic. It therefore may be necessary, in some embodiments, to protect the aluminum current collectors with thin film coatings. The coatings need to be electrically conductive, and non-corrosive when it is in contact with electrode active materials and electrolyte under the intended electrochemical environments. Two types of materials were considered: (1) metals/alloys such as nickel, Ti and Ti alloys, graphite and other carbon materials and composites. Noble metals such as Au, Pt and Ag can also be used, but their costs are too high for many applications. (2) conductive metal oxides such as nickel oxide, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, aluminum doped zinc oxide, and indium tin oxide (ITO). Deposition of thin protective films of those metals/alloys, and metal oxides can be done according to such processes as chemical vapor deposition (CVD) including Atmospheric pressure CVD (APCVD), Low-pressure CVD (LPCVD), Ultrahigh vacuum CVD (UHVCVD), Microwave plasma-assisted CVD (MPCVD), Plasma-Enhanced CVD
(67) (PECVD), Combustion Chemical Vapor Deposition (CCVD), and Photo-initiated CVD (PICVD) and physical vapor deposition (PVD) including cathodic arc deposition, electron beam PVD, evaporative deposition, sputtering deposition, and pulsed laser deposition. Pulsed laser deposition was chosen for each of these materials. The ability of thin protective films to protect aluminum current collectors from surface oxidation and corrosion depends on the material nature of the thin films as well as the methods for depositing the thin films. The thickness, electrical conductivity, adhesion and density of the protective films that affect their protective ability are affected by the methods of deposition and processing parameters.
(68) A series of protective materials including Ti, Ni, graphite, NiO, TiO.sub.2, tin-doped indium oxide (ITO), and ZnO were deposited as the protective films on unkarstified Al foils of 250 m thick by pulsed laser deposition (PLD). Those protective films were either deposited for short time (20 minutes, called thin film in
(69) The protective film coated unkarstified Al surface was used as a current collector in contact with MnO.sub.2 paste (consisting of 75% MnO.sub.2, 15% Super C65 Carbon black and 10% PTFE binder, mass of MnO.sub.2 paste 0.10 g) to form a positive electrode for the supercapacitor cell, and with activated carbon paste (consisting of 80% Picatif SuperCat PUI 4869 Activate Carbon, 15% Super C65 Carbon black and 5% PTFE binder, mass of paste 0.05 g) form the negative electrode. The electrode area was 20 mm20 mm square. The supercapacitor cell was assembled by pressing the cathode, a gore separator and the anode between two stainless supported plates at a pressure of 9-10 pounds to form a typical button cell. The Carbon-MnO.sub.2 asymmetric supercapacitor cell was then tested in the in 0.5 M Na.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous electrolyte.
(70) The cell resistance determined from galvanostatic charging-discharging (constant current 25 mA at 0.01 Hz) curves plotted as function of cycling number for all coating materials and the results are shown in the
(71) It was found that the thicker the metal oxide is, the higher its initial resistance is. When the charging-discharging cycle number increased, the resistance of cells having un-coated aluminum current collector increased quickly and linearly and reached 13.6 or 54.4 .Math.cm.sup.2 at 706 cycles. The resistance of cells with metal (Ti and Ni)-coated aluminum current collectors were only slightly changed and had values fluctuating near 5 or 20 .Math.cm.sup.2 for Ni and 2.5 or 10 .Math.cm.sup.2 for Ti. The resistance of cells having Graphite-coated Al current collectors increased much more quickly than that of bare Al and the value reached 24 or 96 .Math.cm.sup.2 at 416 cycles. The resistance of cells having thick metal oxide (NiO and ITO)-coated aluminum current collector did not increase and almost kept constant at value of 34.5 or 22.4 .Math.cm.sup.2 for ITO or 39 or 10.2 .Math.cm.sup.2 for NiO throughout the 700 cycles. The resistance of cells having thin metal oxide (NiO, ZnO, TiO.sub.2 and ITO)-coated aluminum current collector increased rapidly with cycle number.
(72) The results indicate that metal coatings (Ni and Ti) and thick metal oxide coatings (NiO and ITO) were able to protect aluminum current collectors from surface oxidation in the Carbon-MnO.sub.2 asymmetric supercapacitor cell with 0.5 M Na.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous electrolyte. The metal oxide coatings, however, introduced high interfacial resistance due to their relatively poor electrical conductivity; therefore, they may not be as good as metal coatings. Graphite, in this study, did not show good protection for Al, although it has proven itself in other studies. Thin metal oxide coatings are found not to generally be suitable since they may not be thick enough to form a dense layer to protect aluminum from surface oxidation. From the above example, we conclude that the Al surface coated with Ti is best for the Carbon-MnO.sub.2 asymmetric supercapacitor asymmetric cells in aqueous electrolyte. For other types of supercapacitors, such as symmetry activated carbon based supercapaciotors, using different electrolytes, such as strong acid or base aqueous electrolyte or organic electrolytes, other energy storage devices in general, may needed different coating materials as the protective films.
(73) The performance improvement with a protective coating at the interface between active material and unkarstified Al current collector for energy storage devices such as supercacaitors is demonstrated above. It is also expected that similar performance improvement with a protective coating will also be applicable for the karstified Al foils.
(74) Coated Karstified Al
(75) Applicant has further investigated the coating of a karstified Al foil with Ti, and C. An Al foil um thick was karstified with an excimer laser that was not operating reliably, and therefore the details of the processing are not included here. The Ti coating was applied by PLD using the same chamber and same laser, and so the foil was karstified and coated in a single vacuum chamber, but the vacuum was removed to move the foil between the karstification and deposition positions. The Ti layer was estimated to be deposited to a thickness of 0.6-1.2 m. The sample was tested as a current collector in an activated carbon MnO.sub.2 asymmetric supercapacitor cell in 0.5 M Na.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous electrolyte. This electrochemical cell was subjected to impedance spectroscopy, 5000 cycles of galvanostatic testing, and then again to impedance spectroscopy, which indicated that the coated karstified current collector has reduced internal cell resistance in comparison with the unkarstified, uncoated Al reference button cell, and had lower change in internal resistance after the cyclic galvanostatic testing, than the uncoated, unkarstified reference.
(76) Applicant has further investigated karstified Al foils with composite conductive coatings. A 25 m thick Al foil was karstified by a Q-Switched Diode-Pumped Solid-State laser in vacuum using the following parameters: diode laser drive current 20 A; repetition rate 1000 Hz; power 0.101 w; pulse energy 101 J and energy density per pulse 0.034 J/cm.sup.2. The composite film was deposited on the 25 m thick Al foils by laser ablation in 10 mtorr of Ar gas using 3-5 J/cm.sup.2 laser energy at repetition rate of 50 Hz for 40 minutes to achieve about 0.3-0.5 m thickness. The composite coated and laser karstified 25 m thick Al foils were used as current collectors, and were tested in supercapacitor cells. The preparation and assembly of electrode active materials, separator and electrochemical cells as well as testing procedure are exactly the same as for testing the karstified 50 m thick Al foils described hereinabove. The laser karstified 25 m thick Al foils without composite coating were used to assemble a control cell for comparison, and were otherwise identical. Impedance spectroscopy (using 10 mV amplitude and 10 mHz-0.2 MHz frequency) was used to analyze the internal resistance of the electrochemical cells. The composite coated, karstified Al current collectors had lower interfacial resistance than the karstified Al reference collector. A preliminary report of longevity testing has shown interface resistance and capacity stability to 10,000 cycles with the coating.
(77) Other advantages that are inherent to the structure are obvious to one skilled in the art. The embodiments are described herein illustratively and are not meant to limit the scope of the invention as claimed. Variations of the foregoing embodiments will be evident to a person of ordinary skill and are intended by the inventor to be encompassed by the following claims.