The demand for high-performance energy storage devices to power Internet of Things applications has driven intensive research on micro-supercapacitors (MSCs). In this study, RuN films made by magnetron sputtering as an efficient electrode material for MSCs are investigated. The sputtering parameters are carefully studied in order to maximize film porosity while maintaining high electrical conductivity, enabling a fast charging process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicro-supercapacitors emerge as an important electrical energy storage technology expected to play a critical role in the large-scale deployment of autonomous microdevices for health, sensing, monitoring, and other IoT applications. Electrochemical double-layer capacitive storage requires a combination of high surface area and high electronic conductivity, with these being attained only in porous or nanostructured carbons, and recently found also in conducting metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). However, techniques for conformal deposition at micro- and nanoscale of these materials are complex, costly, and hard to upscale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFast charging is a critical concern for the next generation of electrochemical energy storage devices, driving extensive research on new electrode materials for electrochemical capacitors and micro-supercapacitors. Here we introduce a significant advance in producing thick ruthenium nitride pseudocapacitive films fabricated using a sputter deposition method. These films deliver over 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrosupercapacitors (MSCs) have emerged as the next generation of electrochemical energy storage sources for powering miniaturized embedded electronic and Internet of Things devices. Despite many advantages such as high-power density, long cycle life, fast charge/discharge rate, and moderate energy density, MSCs are not at the industrial level in 2022, while the first MSC was published more than 20 years ago. MSC performance is strongly correlated to electrode material, device configuration, and the used electrolyte.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMiniaturized electronics suffer from a lack of energy autonomy. In that context, the fabrication of lithium-ion solid-state microbatteries with high performance is mandatory for powering the next generation of portable electronic devices. Here, the fabrication of a thin film positive electrode for 3D Li-ion microbatteries made by the atomic layer deposition (ALD) method and in situ lithiation step is demonstrated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicro-batteries are attractive miniaturized energy devices for new Internet of Things applications, but the lack of understanding of their degradation process during cycling hinders improving their performance. Here focused ion beam (FIB)-lamella from LiMn Ni O (LMNO) thin-film cathode is in situ cycled in a liquid electrolyte inside an electrochemical transmission electron microscope (TEM) holder to analyze structural and morphology changes upon (de)lithiation processes. A high-quality electrical connection between the platinum (Pt) current collector of FIB-lamella and the microchip's Pt working electrode is established, as confirmed by local two-probe conductivity measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the last decade, transmission X-ray microscopes (TXMs) have come into operation in most of the synchrotrons worldwide. They have proven to be outstanding tools for non-invasive ex and in situ 3D characterization of materials at the nanoscale across varying range of scientific applications. However, their spatial resolution has not improved in many years, while newly developed functional materials and microdevices with enhanced performances exhibit nanostructures always finer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiNiMnO (LNMO) is a promising 5V-class electrode for Li-ion batteries but suffers from manganese dissolution and electrolyte decomposition owing to the high working potential. An attractive solution to stabilize the surface chemistry consists in mastering the interface between the LNMO electrode and the liquid electrolyte with a surface protective layer made from the powerful surface deposition method. Here, we show that a 7400 nm thick sputtered LNMO film coated with a nanometer-thick lithium-ion-conductive LiPO layer was deposited by the atomic layer deposition method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe formation of a thin film electrode exhibiting high capacity and high rate capabilities is challenging in the field of miniaturized electrochemical energy storage. Here, we present an elegant strategy to tune the morphology and the properties of sputtered porous NbO thin films deposited on Si-based substrates via the magnetron sputtering deposition technique. Kinetic analysis of the redox reactions is studied to qualify the charge storage process, where we observe a non-diffusion-controlled mechanism within the porous niobium pentoxide thin film.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegration of electrochemical capacitors with silicon-based electronics is a major challenge, limiting energy storage on a chip. We describe a wafer-scale process for manufacturing strongly adhering carbide-derived carbon films and interdigitated micro-supercapacitors with embedded titanium carbide current collectors, fully compatible with current microfabrication and silicon-based device technology. Capacitance of those films reaches 410 farads per cubic centimeter/200 millifarads per square centimeter in aqueous electrolyte and 170 farads per cubic centimeter/85 millifarads per square centimeter in organic electrolyte.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have performed a detailed study of four Perfluorinated Graded Index Polymer Optical Fiber (50/490, 62.5/490 and 120/490) issued from several manufacturers and designed to be used in short length (100m) small office/home office network operating at 850nm. We have used commercially available 850nm low cost XFP transceivers and have compared the power dispersion penalties measurements with the ones realized using a photoreceiver including the Electronic Dispersion Compensation technology to increase the range of the transmission without impairments.
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