Return to all News

What is liquid metal for high-entropy alloy nanoparticles synthesis?

Liquid metal synthesis is an emerging technique for producing high-entropy alloy (HEA) nanoparticles by using liquid metal droplets as both reactors and precursors. This innovative approach addresses challenges in creating complex multi-element alloys at the nanoscale. 

High-Entropy Alloys Background: 

Definition: 

  • Alloys containing 5 or more principal elements in equimolar or near-equimolar ratios 
  • Each element: 5-35 atomic percent 
  • High configurational entropy stabilizes single-phase solid solutions 

Properties: 

  • Exceptional mechanical strength and hardness 
  • Superior corrosion and oxidation resistance 
  • High-temperature stability 
  • Excellent catalytic activity 
  • Unique electronic and magnetic properties 

Challenges with Traditional HEA Nanoparticle Synthesis: 

  • Different melting points of constituent elements 
  • Immiscibility in liquid or solid states 
  • Elemental segregation during cooling 
  • Difficulty achieving homogeneous mixing at nanoscale 
  • Complex processing requiring specialized equipment 

Liquid Metal Synthesis Approach: 

Concept: Use low-melting-point liquid metals (gallium, indium, bismuth, tin) as: 

  1. Solvent: Dissolve other metals at moderate temperatures 
  1. Reaction medium: Enable atomic-level mixing 
  1. Size control: Liquid droplet size determines nanoparticle size 

Process: 

Step 1: Metal Dissolution 

  • Liquid metal (e.g., gallium at room temperature, tin/bismuth at ~200-300°C) 
  • Dissolve target metals (Cu, Ni, Fe, Co, Pt, etc.) into liquid metal 
  • Operate at temperatures well below traditional melting points 
  • Achieve homogeneous atomic mixing in liquid state 

Step 2: Nanoparticle Formation 

  • Ultrasonication: Break bulk liquid metal into droplets (generates nanoparticles) 
  • Chemical etching: Remove liquid metal matrix, leaving HEA nanoparticles 
  • Galvanic replacement: Replace liquid metal atoms with other metals 
  • Dealloying: Selectively dissolve liquid metal component 

Step 3: Surface Cleaning 

  • Remove residual liquid metal 
  • Passivate surfaces if needed 
  • Functionalize for specific applications 

Advantages: 

Low Temperature Processing: 

  • Gallium melts at 30°C (can be liquid at room temperature) 
  • Tin/bismuth eutectics melt ~140-200°C 
  • Much lower than traditional HEA synthesis (>1500°C) 
  • Prevents decomposition of temperature-sensitive elements 

Atomic-Level Mixing: 

  • Liquid state ensures homogeneous distribution 
  • No elemental segregation 
  • True single-phase HEAs achieved 

Size Control: 

  • Ultrasonic parameters control droplet/particle size 
  • Surfactants can further tune dimensions 
  • Produces nanoparticles (10-100 nm) difficult to achieve otherwise 

Compositional Flexibility: 

  • Can dissolve multiple elements simultaneously 
  • Easily adjust ratios by changing dissolved amounts 
  • Explore vast compositional spaces 

Scalability: 

  • Continuous flow possible with liquid metals 
  • Simple equipment compared to arc melting or sputtering 
  • Room temperature or mild heating 

Materials Produced: 

Catalytic HEAs: 

  • Pt-Pd-Rh-Ru-Ir for fuel cells and chemical catalysis 
  • Co-Fe-Ni-Cu-Mn for electrocatalysis 
  • Superior activity compared to single-metal catalysts 

Structural HEAs: 

  • Al-Co-Cr-Fe-Ni (CoCrFeMnNi family) 
  • Enhanced mechanical properties 
  • Corrosion-resistant coatings 

Magnetic HEAs: 

  • Fe-Co-Ni-Cu-Zn 
  • Soft magnetic properties 
  • Electronic applications 

Liquid Metal Hosts: 

Gallium (Ga): 

  • Melts at 29.76°C (liquid near/at room temperature) 
  • Non-toxic, easy handling 
  • Dissolves many transition metals 
  • Most commonly used liquid metal for this purpose 

Gallium Alloys: 

  • Ga-In eutectic (melts at 15.5°C) 
  • Ga-Sn alloys for higher temperature stability 
  • Ga-In-Sn eutectic (Galinstan) remains liquid to -19°C 

Tin (Sn) and Bismuth (Bi): 

  • Higher melting points but still moderate (~200-300°C) 
  • Different solubility profiles for various elements 
  • Suitable for elements less soluble in gallium 

Process Variations: 

Ultrasonication Method: 

  • Sonicate liquid metal containing dissolved elements in solution 
  • Creates emulsion of liquid metal droplets 
  • Chemical etchant removes liquid metal shell 
  • HEA nanoparticles remain 

Dealloying: 

  • Dissolve liquid metal component selectively 
  • Leaves behind porous or solid HEA nanoparticles 
  • Can create high surface area catalysts 

Galvanic Replacement: 

  • More noble metals replace liquid metal atoms 
  • Creates hollow or porous structures 
  • Useful for catalytic applications 

Advantages Over Conventional HEA Synthesis: 

Traditional Methods: 

  • Arc melting: Requires very high temperatures, produces bulk materials 
  • Magnetron sputtering: Expensive, slow, limited compositions 
  • Mechanical alloying: Contamination, limited to certain elements, produces micron-sized particles 

Liquid Metal Advantages: 

  • Lower temperature (orders of magnitude cooler) 
  • True nanoscale particles (10-100 nm vs. microns) 
  • Better compositional homogeneity 
  • Faster processing 
  • More accessible equipment 
  • Easier compositional exploration 

Applications: 

Catalysis: 

  • Fuel cell electrodes (oxygen reduction, hydrogen evolution) 
  • Chemical synthesis catalysts 
  • Environmental remediation (CO₂ reduction, pollutant degradation) 
  • Higher activity and stability than single-metal catalysts 

Energy Storage: 

  • Battery electrodes with enhanced capacity 
  • Supercapacitor materials 
  • Hydrogen storage media 

Coatings: 

  • Corrosion-resistant nanocoatings 
  • Wear-resistant surfaces 
  • Thermal barrier coatings 

Electronics: 

  • Conductive inks and pastes 
  • Magnetic storage media 
  • Sensor materials 

Challenges: 

Liquid Metal Removal: 

  • Complete removal critical for applications 
  • Residual gallium/tin can affect properties 
  • Requires effective etching or cleaning protocols 

Oxidation: 

  • HEA nanoparticles can oxidize 
  • Passivation or protective coatings needed 
  • Storage under inert conditions 

Solubility Limitations: 

  • Not all elements dissolve readily in liquid metals 
  • Solubility temperature-dependent 
  • May require different liquid metal hosts for different compositions 

Scalability: 

  • Liquid metal costs (especially gallium) 
  • Recovery and recycling of liquid metal host 
  • Continuous production protocols still developing 

Future Directions: 

Automated Exploration: 

  • High-throughput screening of HEA compositions 
  • Machine learning to predict optimal compositions 
  • Rapid catalyst discovery 

Multifunctional Nanoparticles: 

  • Core-shell structures 
  • Gradient compositions 
  • Integration with other nanomaterials 

Green Chemistry: 

  • Water-based processing 
  • Liquid metal recycling 
  • Reduced energy consumption vs. traditional methods 

Liquid metal synthesis represents a paradigm shift in HEA nanoparticle production, enabling creation of complex multi-element nanoparticles at unprecedented temperatures and compositional control. This approach is particularly promising for catalysis applications where nanoscale HEAs show superior performance compared to traditional single-metal catalysts.