High-Performance Complementary Electrochromic Device Based on Iridium Oxide as a Counter Electrode

Materials (Basel). 2021 Mar 24;14(7):1591. doi: 10.3390/ma14071591.

Abstract

In complementary electrochromic devices (ECDs), nickel oxide (NiO) is generally used as a counter electrode material for enhancing the coloration efficiency. However, an NiO film as a counter electrode in ECDs is susceptible to degradation upon prolonged electrochemical cycling, which leads to an insufficient device lifetime. In this study, a type of counter electrode iridium oxide (IrO2) layer was fabricated using vacuum cathodic arc plasma (CAP). We focused on the comparison of IrO2 and NiO deposited on a 5 × 5 cm2 indium tin oxide (ITO) glass substrate with various Ar/O2 gas-flow ratios (1/2, 1/2.5, and 1/3) in series. The optical performance of IrO2-ECD (glass/ITO/WO3/liquid electrolyte/IrO2/ITO/glass) was determined by optical transmittance modulation; ∆T = 50% (from Tbleaching (75%) to Tcoloring (25%)) at 633 nm was higher than that of NiO-ECD (ITO/NiO/liquid electrolyte/WO3/ITO) (∆T = 32%). Apart from this, the ECD device demonstrated a fast coloring time of 4.8 s, a bleaching time of 1.5 s, and good cycling durability, which remained at 50% transmittance modulation even after 1000 cycles. The fast time was associated with the IrO2 electrode and provided higher diffusion coefficients and a filamentary shape as an interface that facilitated the transfer of the Li ions into/out of the interface electrodes and the electrolyte. In our result of IrO2-ECD analyses, the higher optical transmittance modulation was useful for promoting electrochromic application to a cycle durability test as an alternative to NiO-ECD.

Keywords: cathodic arc plasma (CAP); electrochromic device (ECD); iridium oxide (IrO2) film; nickel oxide (NiO) film.