Abstract

Nanoporous structures have proven as an effective way for enhanced electrochromic performance by providing a large surface area can get fast ion/electron transfer path, leading to larger optical modulation and fast response time. Herein, for the first time, application of vacuum cathodic arc plasma (CAP) deposition technology to the synthesis of WO3/NiO electrode films on ITO glass for use in fabricating complementary electrochromic devices (ECDs) with a ITO/WO3/LiClO4-Perchlorate solution/NiO/ITO structure. Our objective was to optimize electrochromic performance through the creation of electrodes with a nanoporous structure. We also examined the influence of WO3 film thickness on the electrochemical and optical characteristics in terms of surface charge capacity and diffusion coefficients. The resulting 200-nm-thick WO3 films achieved ion diffusion coefficients of (7.35 × 10−10 (oxidation) and 4.92 × 10−10 cm2/s (reduction)). The complementary charge capacity ratio of WO3 (200 nm thickness)/NiO (60 nm thickness) has impressive reversibility of 98%. A demonstration ECD device (3 × 4 cm2) achieved optical modulation (ΔT) of 46% and switching times of 3.1 sec (coloration) and 4.6 sec (bleaching) at a wavelength of 633 nm. In terms of durability, the proposed ECD achieved ΔT of 43% after 2500 cycles; i.e., 93% of the initial device.

Highlights

  • Over the past decades, electrochromic devices (ECDs) have been used in energy efficient buildings, optical information displays, variable-reflectance mirrors, switchable mirrors, and electronic papers[1,2,3,4,5]

  • Electrochromic WO3 films have been fabricated using a variety of methods, including sputtering[24,25,26,27], chemical vapor deposition (CVD)[28,29,30], spray pyrolysis[31,32], thermal evaporation[33], electron-beam deposition[34], and sol-gel[35,36,37] methods

  • The movement of ions into the electrochromic layers is responsible for the coloration of the ECDs

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Summary

Introduction

Electrochromic devices (ECDs) have been used in energy efficient buildings, optical information displays, variable-reflectance mirrors, switchable mirrors, and electronic papers[1,2,3,4,5]. Electrochromism materials change their optical characteristics (transmittance, reflectance, and absorption) reversibly through applying a dc voltage[6]. Complementary ECDs are composed of anodic and cathodic coloring materials in a five-layer structure. We examined the degree to which the thickness of WO3 layers affects the electrochemical and optical properties of ECDs

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