ABSTRACT
Although the Li metal has been gaining attention as a promising anode material for the next-generation high-energy-density rechargeable batteries owing to its high theoretical specific capacity (3860 mAh g-1), its practical use remains challenging owing to inherent issues related to Li nucleation and growth. This paper reports the fabrication of a lithiophilic multichannel layer (LML) that enables the simultaneous control of Li nucleation and growth in Li-metal batteries. The LML, composed of lithiophilic ceramic composite nanoparticles (Ag-plated Al2O3 particles), is fabricated using the electroless plating method. This LML provides numerous channels for a uniform Li-ion diffusion on a nonwoven separator. Furthermore, the lithiophilic Ag on the Li metal anode surface facing the LML induces a low overpotential during Li nucleation, resulting in a dense Li deposition. The LML enables the LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2|| Li cells to maintain a capacity higher than 75% after 100 cycles, even at high charge/discharge rates of 5.0 C at a cutoff voltage of 4.4 V, and achieve an ultrahigh energy density of 1164 Wh kg-1. These results demonstrate that the LML is a promising solution enabling the application of Li metal as an anode material in the next-generation Li-ion batteries.
ABSTRACT
A highly flexible and transparent transistor is developed based on an exfoliated MoS2 channel and CVD-grown graphene source/drain electrodes. Introducing the 2D nanomaterials provides a high mechanical flexibility, optical transmittance (â¼74%), and current on/off ratio (>10(4)) with an average field effect mobility of â¼4.7 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1), all of which cannot be achieved by other transistors consisting of a MoS2 active channel/metal electrodes or graphene channel/graphene electrodes. In particular, a low Schottky barrier (â¼22 meV) forms at the MoS2 /graphene interface, which is comparable to the MoS2 /metal interface. The high stability in electronic performance of the devices upon bending up to ±2.2 mm in compressive and tensile modes, and the ability to recover electrical properties after degradation upon annealing, reveal the efficacy of using 2D materials for creating highly flexible and transparent devices.
ABSTRACT
We demonstrate the modulation of electrical switching properties through the interconnection of multiple nanoscale channels (â¼600 nm) in a single VO2 nanobeam with a coexisting metal-insulator (M-I) domain configuration during phase transition. The Raman scattering characteristics of the synthesized VO2 nanobeams provide evidence that substrate-induced interfacial strain can be inhomogeneously distributed along the length of the nanobeam. Interestingly, the nanoscale VO2 devices with the same channel length and width exhibit distinct differences in hysteric current-voltage characteristics, which are explained by theoretical calculations of resistance change combined with Joule heating simulations of the nanoscale VO2 channels. The observed results can be attributed to the difference in the spatial distribution and fraction ratios of M-I domains due to interfacial strain in the nanoscale VO2 channels during the metal-insulator transition process. Moreover, we demonstrate the electrically activated resistive switching characteristics based on the hysteresis behaviors of the interconnected nanoscale channels, implying the possibility of manipulating multiple resistive states. Our results may offer insights into the nanoscale engineering of correlated phases in VO2 as the key materials of neuromorphic computing for which nonlinear conductance is essential.
ABSTRACT
A method for transforming planar electronic devices into 3D structures under mechanically mild and stable conditions is demonstrated. This strategy involves diffusion control of acetone as a plasticizer into a spatially designed acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) framework to both laminate membrane-type electronic devices and transform them into a desired 3D shape. Optical, mechanical, and electrical analysis reveals that the plasticized region serves as a damper and even reflows to release the stress of fragile elements, for example, an Au interconnect electrode in this study, below the ultimate stress point. This method also gives considerable freedom in aligning electronic devices not only in the neutral mechanical plane of the ABS framework, which is the general approach in flexible electronics, but also to the top surface, without inducing electrical failure. Finally, to develop a prototype omnidirectional optical system with minimal aberrations, this method is used to produce a bezel-less tetrahedral image sensor.
ABSTRACT
Introducing two-dimensional post arrays and a water-soluble sacrificial layer between an ultrathin substrate and a handling substrate provides controllability of the interfacial adhesion in a stable manner. The periodically anchored and suspended configuration after the chemical etching process facilitates the development of, for example, printable Alq3 -based OLEDs that can be attached to unconventional surfaces.