4.6 Article

The electric double layer effect and its strong suppression at Li+ solid electrolyte/hydrogenated diamond interfaces

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS CHEMISTRY
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42004-021-00554-7

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI [JP20H05301, JP19K05279, JP19J22244]
  2. Kurata Grants from The Hitachi Global Foundation
  3. Foundation for Promotion of Material Science and Technology of Japan (MST Foundation)
  4. Yazaki Memorial Foundation for Science and Technology
  5. Murata Science Foundation
  6. NIMS Electron Microscopy Analysis Station, Nanostructural Characterization Group

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The study demonstrates that the electric double layer effect with different solid electrolytes can be evaluated using hydrogenated diamond-based transistors, where the transistor with Li-Si-Zr-O solid electrolyte shows significant EDL-induced hole density modulation, while the one with Li-La-Ti-O solid electrolyte shows minimal enhancement, possibly due to charge neutralization in the LLTO caused by variation in the valence state of the Ti ions.
The electric double layer (EDL) effect at solid electrolyte/electrode interfaces has been a key topic in many energy and nanoelectronics applications (e.g., all-solid-state Li+ batteries and memristors). However, its characterization remains difficult in comparison with liquid electrolytes. Herein, we use a novel method to show that the EDL effect, and its suppression at solid electrolyte/electronic material interfaces, can be characterized on the basis of the electric conduction characteristics of hydrogenated diamond(H-diamond)-based EDL transistors (EDLTs). Whereas H-diamond-based EDLT with a Li-Si-Zr-O Li+ solid electrolyte showed EDL-induced hole density modulation over a range of up to three orders of magnitude, EDLT with a Li-La-Ti-O (LLTO) Li+ solid electrolyte showed negligible enhancement, which indicates strong suppression of the EDL effect. Such suppression is attributed to charge neutralization in the LLTO, which is due to variation in the valence state of the Ti ions present. The method described is useful for quantitatively evaluating the EDL effect in various solid electrolytes. The effect of the electric double layer with solid electrolytes remains hard to characterize. In this study, the authors show how to evaluate the electric double layer effect with various lithium solid electrolytes using a hydrogenated diamond-based transistor.

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