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Remnant Copper Cation-Assisted Atom Mixing in Multicomponent Nanoparticles.

Suin JoChi Ho LeeHaneul JinEunsoo LeeTaekyung KimHionsuck BaikSang Uck LeeSung Jong YooKwangyeol LeeJongsik Park
Published in: ACS nano (2024)
Nanostructured high-/medium-entropy compounds have emerged as important catalytic materials for energy conversion technologies, but complex thermodynamic relationships involved with the element mixing enthalpy have been a considerable roadblock to the formation of stable single-phase structures. Cation exchange reactions (CERs), in particular with copper sulfide templates, have been extensively investigated for the synthesis of multicomponent heteronanoparticles with unconventional structural features. Because copper cations within the host copper sulfide templates are stoichiometrically released with incoming foreign cations in CERs to maintain the overall charge balance, the complete absence of Cu cations in the nanocrystals after initial CERs would mean that further compositional variation would not be possible by subsequent CERs. Herin, we successfully retained a portion of Cu cations within the silver sulfide (Ag 2 S) and gold sulfide (Au 2 S) phases of Janus Cu 2-x S-M 2 S (M = Ag, Au) nanocrystals after the CERs, by partially suppressing the transformation of the anion sublattice that inevitably occurs during the introduction of external cations. Interestingly, the subsequent CERs on Janus Cu 1.81 S-M 2 S (M = Ag, Au), by utilizing the remnant Cu cations, allowed the construction of Janus Cu 1.81 S-Ag x Au y S, which preserved the initial heterointerface. The synthetic strategy described in this work to suppress the complete removal of the Cu cation from the template could fabricate the CER-driven heterostructures with greatly diversified compositions, which exhibit unusual optical and catalytic properties.
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