Abstract
Compact, rechargeable batteries in the capacity range of 1-100 mAh are targeted at form-factor-constrained wearables and other high-performance electronic devices, which have core requirements including high volumetric energy density (VED), fast charging, safety, surface-mount technology (SMT) compatibility and long cycle life. Solid-state lithium thin film batteries (TFB) fabricated on thin substrates and packaged in a multilayer stack offer these attributes, overcoming the limitations of lithium-ion batteries based on liquid electrolytes. To maximize the VED, an anodeless architecture fabricated using a roll-to-roll process on an ultrathin stainless-steel substrate (10-75 um in thickness) has been developed. These microbatteries use a lithium cobalt oxide (LiCoO2) cathode and lithium phosphorus oxynitride (LiPON) electrolyte deposited by thin film techniques to enable key battery performance metrics. A high-device-density dry-process patterning flow defines customizable battery device dimensions while generating negligible waste. The entire fabrication operation is performed in a conventional, humidity-controlled cleanroom eliminating the need for a costly dry-room environment that allows for simplified, lower-cost manufacturing. Such scale-up using an anodeless architecture also enables a thermal-budget-compatible packaging and metallization scheme targeted at industry-compatible SMT processes. Further manufacturability improvements such as the use of high-speed tests add to the overall range of elements necessary for mass production. A perspective on requirements and opportunities for this technology as it evolves is provided.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Table 1. Parameters used for VED calculation
Description
Supplementary Table 1. Parameters used for VED calculation
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