Multi-principal elemental intermetallic nanoparticles synthesized via a disorder-to-order transition
Author(s) -
Mingjin Cui,
Chunpeng Yang,
Sooyeon Hwang,
Menghao Yang,
Sean Overa,
Qi Dong,
Yonggang Yao,
Alexandra H. Brozena,
David A. Cullen,
Miaofang Chi,
Thomas Blum,
David J. Morris,
Y. Zou Finfrock,
Xizheng Wang,
Peng Zhang,
Vitaliy G. Goncharov,
Xiaofeng Guo,
Jian Luo,
Yifei Mo,
Feng Jiao,
Liangbing Hu
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.abm4322
Subject(s) - intermetallic , nanoparticle , nanoscopic scale , materials science , nanotechnology , phase transition , annealing (glass) , agglomerate , transition metal , catalysis , chemistry , metallurgy , alloy , composite material , thermodynamics , biochemistry , physics
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 L10 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.
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