University of Limerick
Browse

Bimetallic CuNi nanoparticle formation: solution combustion synthesis and molecular dynamic approaches

Download (7.89 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-13, 08:24 authored by Valentin Romanovski, Nickolay Sdobnyakov, Sergey Roslyakov, Andrei Kolosov, Kirill Podbolotov, Kseniya Savina, Witold KwapinskiWitold Kwapinski, Dmitry Moskovskikh, Alexander Khor

Nanomaterials are vital in catalysis, sensing, energy storage, and biomedicine and now incorporate multiprincipal element materials to meet evolving technological demands. However, achieving a uniform distribution of multiple elements in these nanomaterials poses significant challenges. In this study, various Cu−Ni compositions were used as a model system to investigate the formation of bimetallic nanoparticles by employing computer simulation molecular dynamics methods and comparing the results with observations from solution-combustion-synthesized materials of the same compositions. The findings reveal the successful synthesis of 12−18 nm bimetallic Cu−Ni nanoparticles with high phase homogeneity, alongside phase-segregated nanoparticles predicted by molecular dynamics simulations. Based on the comparison of the experimental and computational data, a possible scenario for phase segregation during the synthesis was proposed. It includes clustering of the atoms of the same type in an initial solution or the stage of gel formation and further developing segregation during the combustion/cooling stage. The research concludes that early synthesis stages, including particle preformation, significantly influence the phase homogeneity of multiprincipal element alloys. This study contributes to understanding nanomaterial formation, offering insights for improved alloy synthesis and enhanced functionalities in advanced applications.

History

Publication

Inorganic Chemistry 63 (52), pp. 24844−24854

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Also affiliated with

  • Bernal Institute

Sustainable development goals

  • (9) Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure

Department or School

  • Chemical Sciences

Usage metrics

    University of Limerick

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC