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Multi-principal elemental intermetallic nanoparticles synthesized via a disorder-to-order transition.

Mingjin CuiChun-Peng YangSooyeon HwangMenghao YangSean OveraQi DongYonggang YaoAlexandra H BrozenaDavid A CullenMiaofang ChiThomas F BlumDavid J MorrisY Zou FinfrockXizheng WangPeng ZhangVitaliy G GoncharovXiaofeng GuoJian LuoYifei MoFeng JiaoLiangbing Hu
Published in: Science advances (2022)
Nanoscale multi-principal element intermetallics (MPEIs) may provide a broad and tunable compositional space of active, high-surface area materials with potential applications such as catalysis and magnetics. However, MPEI nanoparticles are challenging to fabricate because of the tendency of the particles to grow/agglomerate or phase-separated during annealing. Here, we demonstrate a disorder-to-order phase transition approach that enables the synthesis of ultrasmall (4 to 5 nm) and stable MPEI nanoparticles (up to eight elements). We apply just 5 min of Joule heating to promote the phase transition of the nanoparticles into L1 0 intermetallic structure, which is then preserved by rapidly cooling. This disorder-to-order transition results in phase-stable nanoscale MPEIs with compositions (e.g., PtPdAuFeCoNiCuSn), which have not been previously attained by traditional synthetic methods. This synthesis strategy offers a new paradigm for developing previously unexplored MPEI nanoparticles by accessing a nanoscale-size regime and novel compositions with potentially broad applications.
Keyphrases
  • atomic force microscopy
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule