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High-throughput, combinatorial synthesis of multimetallic nanoclusters

Authors :
Jinlong Gao
Liangbing Hu
Yimin Mao
Yonggang Yao
Helge S. Stein
Qi Dong
Tangyuan Li
Hua Xie
Chao Wang
André D. Taylor
Hang Wang
John M. Gregoire
Steven D. Lacey
Pengfei Xie
Ichiro Takeuchi
Reza Shahbazian-Yassar
Miaolun Jiao
Yifan Liu
Rongzhong Jiang
Jiaqi Dai
Zhennan Huang
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2020.

Abstract

Significance Multielement nanomaterials hold great promise for various applications due to their widely tunable surface chemistry, yet it remains challenging to efficiently study this multidimensional space. Conventional approaches are typically slow and depend on serendipity, while a robust and general synthesis is still lacking among increasingly complex compositions. We report a high-throughput technique for combinatorial compositional design (formulation in solution phases) and rapid synthesis (within seconds) of ultrafine multimetallic nanoclusters with a homogeneous alloy structure. We synthesized and screened the PtPdRhRuIrFeCoNi compositional space using scanning droplet cell electrochemistry, with two promising catalysts quickly identified and further verified in a rotating disk setup. The reported high-throughput approach establishes a facile and reliable pipeline to significantly accelerate material discovery in multimetallic nanomaterials.<br />Multimetallic nanoclusters (MMNCs) offer unique and tailorable surface chemistries that hold great potential for numerous catalytic applications. The efficient exploration of this vast chemical space necessitates an accelerated discovery pipeline that supersedes traditional “trial-and-error” experimentation while guaranteeing uniform microstructures despite compositional complexity. Herein, we report the high-throughput synthesis of an extensive series of ultrafine and homogeneous alloy MMNCs, achieved by 1) a flexible compositional design by formulation in the precursor solution phase and 2) the ultrafast synthesis of alloy MMNCs using thermal shock heating (i.e., ∼1,650 K, ∼500 ms). This approach is remarkably facile and easily accessible compared to conventional vapor-phase deposition, and the particle size and structural uniformity enable comparative studies across compositionally different MMNCs. Rapid electrochemical screening is demonstrated by using a scanning droplet cell, enabling us to discover two promising electrocatalysts, which we subsequently validated using a rotating disk setup. This demonstrated high-throughput material discovery pipeline presents a paradigm for facile and accelerated exploration of MMNCs for a broad range of applications.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
117
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ccd5e632f6cdfd8a43958d7857d48757