Method for manufacturing thin films by utilizing short laser pulses and composite target materials
20170342544 · 2017-11-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
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
H01M50/403
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/0525
ELECTRICITY
H01M4/0471
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M10/0525
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The present invention presents a method for manufacturing tight and porous coatings from metallic, ceramic and organic materials by utilizing composite targets manufactured of two or several materials, which are disintegrated, and producing in this way material flow towards the object to be coated by utilizing short laser pulses directed to the target material. With the method it is possible to produce material structures in a controlled manner, minimizing the needed energy of the laser pulses and heat generation, and with the method it is also possible to improve productivity by correctly choosing the components for the target material.
Claims
1. Method for manufacturing a thin film type of coating by means of laser pulses, wherein: a target of a desired shape is manufactured from at least two different target materials by means of pressure and/or temperature by compressing, in which the ablation threshold (J/cm.sup.2) of at least one material component of the target material is lower than that of the other target materials used; in which the first target material functions as a coating for the second target material before compressing; and in which the first target material is metallic, inorganic or organic material, and in which the coated source material of the target is powdery before compressing; laser pulses are directed to the target for detaching the target materials and for forming particles with a desired size and material distribution; in which the duration of an individual laser pulse is less than 10 ns; and the target materials detached from the target are directed towards the substrate to form a thin film type of coating to the surface or part of the surface of the substrate.
2. Method according to claim 1, wherein the ablation threshold (J/cm.sup.2) of at least one target material used in the target is at least 10% lower than the ablation threshold of the other target materials used.
3. Method according to claim 1, wherein the absorption ability of the laser energy for the target material with the lower ablation threshold has been improved by blending with it at least 0.05 gravimetric percentages of a blend component improving the absorption ability.
4. Method according to claim 1, wherein that share of the target material with the lower ablation threshold of the target is at least 0.01 volumetric percentages.
5. Method according to claim 1, wherein at least 50 volumetric percentages of the target are inorganic material.
6. Method according to claim 1, wherein at least 50 volumetric percentages of the target are metallic material.
7. Method according to claim 1, wherein at least 50 volumetric percentages of the target are polymer material.
8. Method according to claim 1, wherein the target materials used as the source material for the target are powdery, of which at least one powder type is coated with a metallic, inorganic or organic material before the powders are compressed together to form the target.
9. Method according to claim 1, wherein a porous coating is manufactured in the method, the porosity of which is at least 5 volumetric percentages.
10. (canceled)
11. (canceled)
12. (canceled)
13. Method according to claim 1, wherein laser pulses are directed to turning mirrors, in which there is formed a fan-shaped laser beam distribution, which is directed to a telecentric lens, the lens being used for forming an essentially parallel laser pulse front, which front is further directed to the target for forming particles.
14. Method according to claim 1, wherein the laser ablation and coating occur in a vacuum chamber, vacuum or background gas and in a controlled pressure of 10.sup.−8-1000 mbar.
15. Method according to claim 5, wherein the inorganic material is aluminium oxide, silicon oxide or that it consists of several different inorganic materials.
16. Use of the method according to claim 1 for the coating of porous separator films for lithium accumulators.
17. Use of the method according to claim 1 for the coating of porous cathode materials for lithium accumulators.
18. Use of the method according to claim 1 for the manufacturing of porous coatings for sensors.
19. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0026] In the method of the invention there is manufactured a composite target material, in which at least two different materials have been used, the first material (A) being capable to disperse in ablation earlier than the other materials (B) of the target material. The detachment of the material (A) from the target and dispersion can occur, for example, by atomization.
[0027] The composite target material can be manufactured with several different processes, such as by blending the different components with each other in a desired relation and by compressing (i.e. “compacting”) the blend together to form the target material by means of heat and/or pressure. The source materials of the target can at first be in a powdery form. After compacting, the target material can be entirely or partly condensed. One way to compact the powders is to press the initial powder-form materials cold by unconfined compression or cold isostatic compression into a fixed blank, which is finally sintered to form a tighter and stronger compact target material by means of temperature. If the strength of at least one target material is sufficiently low, the target material can be compressed into a sufficiently tight and strong target material by means of heat and pressure even in one step.
[0028] Lowermost in
[0029] In order to promote the controlled dispersion it is essential to manufacture the target material so that as the more easily dispersing material (A) disperses, particles of a desired form and size are formed from the material (B), which are directed towards the substrate. This can be impacted by the right blend of the material components (A) and (B) so that paths formed by the more easily dispersing material (A) are created in the compacted material in a desired manner. The more easily dispersing material (A) may form a thin film or layer to the boundary surfaces of the material (B), which can be either continuous or discontinuous.
[0030] The components of the target material have to be chosen so that the material flow produced from the materials (A) and (B) as the material (A) disperses is directed from the surface of the target material towards the object to be coated with a sufficient speed, thus ensuring the attachment both to the substrate and reciprocally between the particles. However, the energy of the material flow (containing the particles and the atomized material) must not be too strong, because in case of certain materials it might then damage the material to be coated. Especially in cases, in which the material flow increases the temperature of the substrate as it hits it, the rise in temperature together with the kinetic energy of the material flow can cause damages.
[0031] Laser pulses directed to the target material have to be devised so that they separate all material components from the target material in a controlled manner and in a desired form. In some cases it is advantageous to disintegrate only the more easily dispersing material (A) of the two-component target and to minimise the impacts of the laser pulse, such as atomization in the material (B). In this case the objective is that the material (B) forms, for example, a porous material layer to the surface of the substrate and that by choosing material (B) for the target material according to a certain size distribution as it accumulates to the surface of the substrate, also a desired pore distribution is also generated to the coating.
[0032] In a second example of the invention the objective is that also the material (B) disperses partly so that it forms together with the more easily dispersing material (A) a layer increasing its strength around the particles (B) and contact surfaces.
[0033] The impact depth of the laser pulses, i.e. the depth in which the energy brought by the laser pulses achieves dispersion either in the material (A) or both in the material (A) and (B) simultaneously, is controlled by central parameters, such as the energy, length and wavelength of the laser pulses. If, for example, dispersion of the material (A) occurs too deep, there is the risk that the transfer of the material (B) occurs as too large particles so that the particles in the material (B) are not fully detached from each other.
[0034] The laser ablation process is next described referring to
[0035] In the example of the invention there is formed a material flow, which consists of the particle set 13′ comprising the material B and of the atomized material (A) 12′ surrounding this. The particles of the material flow can naturally be of many different sizes and shapes. The parameters used in the laser ablation process together with the material properties of the compacted target define the characteristics of the detached particles of the material flow.
[0036] The purpose of the process is to make the material flow collide with the surface or object 14 to be coated. Because 12′ is atomized more easily detaching material and 13′ is particles, 12′ works like a transmitter for the particles 13′ in the material flow. The final result is a material flux hitting strongly the surface or object 14 to be coated, from which the particles 13′ attach tightly to the surface, forming the coating 15. Because of the transmitter A, the coating can be made porous, when so desired, and the amount of porosity can also be adjusted to be on a desired level, i.e. the number of pores per volume unit of the coating and the size distribution and quality of the pores are adjustable as desired by adjusting the parameters of the ablation process and the material composition of the target.
[0037] A second embodiment of the invention concerns an alternative way for coating presented in claim 8 by using a different type of target forming, see
[0038] The said coated powder or set of powders (in which at least one powder type is coated) can be compacted into a target in high pressure and temperature. The laser ablation process itself can be conducted in the same way as in the embodiment in
[0039] Upon hitting the actual surface 14 to be coated the material flux behaves as above and the particles 13′ attach to the surface 14 forming a porous coating 15 on the object or surface 14.
[0040]
[0041] The plasma and particle material flow 34 in
[0042]
[0043] For improving the uniform quality and productivity of the coating it is advantageous to produce as wide a material flow as possible from the target to the substrate. In an embodiment example of the invention this can be achieved by dispersing the laser pulses into a laser pulse front travelling in the same plane by means of turning mirrors. This arrangement is illustrated in
[0044] The coating process can be scaled to be more efficient so that the material to be coated, such as a separator film, is set to travel between two rotating rolls or rollers. A basic diagram of such an apparatus arrangement is illustrated in
[0045] Ablated material is directed to the desired coating width from one or several coating sources i.e. targets 33 so that material surface 62 to be coated is continuously discharged from the roll 61a to be coated in the processing area of a coating chamber, and after the material has obtained its coating, the material 63 is collected to a second roll 61b for storing. The method can be called a roll-to-roll principle. In other words, the separator film 62 to be coated is originally around the roll 61a. The ablation apparatus with its laser sources 31 and target materials 33 is comprised in the same way as has been described above. The laser pulses 32 make the material to be released as a particle flow 34 (in other words, in the form of a material flux) towards the material 62 to be coated, and as the consequence of adherence the coated polymer film 63 is produced. The coated polymer film 63 is let to rotate around the second roll 61b, the direction of motion of the film being from left to right in the case of
[0046] In addition to the manufacturing method, the inventive idea comprises the coated materials, objects and components achieved as the final result, and the use of the presented manufacturing method, for example, for the coating of porous separator films for lithium accumulators, for the coating of porous cathode materials of lithium accumulators, and for the manufacture of porous coatings for sensors. In principle the object of the invention can be any surface, which is needed to be coated with a high quality coating i.e. thin film, for example, relating to the protection of a material or to the improvement or change of a certain physical characteristic. The final result is then the generation of a coated product fulfilling desired physical or electric characteristics or conditions of desired strength or porosity.
[0047] In other words, the inventive idea of the invention also comprises the object or surface coated with a thin film type of coating obtained as the result of an ablation method. This coating is produced from a compacted target by laser ablation, and the target comprises at least two different target materials. A characteristic feature of the product and also of the method is that the ablation threshold of at least one target material used (i.e. one material component used in the target) is lower i.e. smaller than the ablation threshold of the other target materials in the target. In addition, the material with the higher ablation threshold forms the main part of the produced coating in the final product, and the generated coating has a porous structure.
[0048] The method of the invention has the following advantages: [0049] Porous coatings can be manufactured with a desired pore distribution by choosing particles of suitable sizes (or with a suitable size distribution) and shapes for the manufacture of target materials and by using the material selections to create conditions for the controlled dispersion of the material by the impact of energy generated by the laser pulses. [0050] ii. The amount of laser power needed can be decreased by choosing a more easily dispersing material, when needed. [0051] iii. Thermal stress can be reduced, because the amount of laser power can be decreased in accordance with item ii. [0052] iv. Production efficiency can be increased, because laser ablation has the need to disintegrate only a small part of the target material, the dispersion threshold of which can be reduced e.g. by blending. [0053] v. Because the material disperses selectively, the composition of the coating can be maintained stable in a controlled manner, if there occurs no significant dispersion of the material component which is essential for the functionality.
[0054] In the invention it is possible to combine the said individual features of the invention disclosed above and in the dependent claims into new combinations, in which two or more individual features can be comprised in a same embodiment.
[0055] The present invention is not only restricted to the presented examples, but many variations are possible within the scope of protection defined by the enclosed claims.