posted on 2023-08-17, 17:38authored byYuan Chi, Priyank V. Kumar, Jiewei Zheng, Charlie Kong, Ruohan Yu, Lucy Johnston, Mohammad B. Ghasemian, Md. Arifur Rahim, Tushar Kumeria, Dewei Chu, Xunyu Lu, Guangzhao Mao, Kourosh Kalantar-Zadeh, Jianbo Tang
Metallic nanoarchitectures hold immense value as functional
materials
across diverse applications. However, major challenges lie in effectively
engineering their hierarchical porosity while achieving scalable fabrication
at low processing temperatures. Here we present a liquid-metal solvent-based
method for the nanoarchitecting and transformation of solid metals.
This was achieved by reacting liquid gallium with solid metals to
form crystalline entities. Nanoporous features were then created by
selectively removing the less noble and comparatively softer gallium
from the intermetallic crystals. By controlling the crystal growth
and dealloying conditions, we realized the effective tuning of the
micro-/nanoscale porosities. Proof-of-concept examples were shown
by applying liquid gallium to solid copper, silver, gold, palladium, and platinum, while the
strategy can be extended to a wider range of metals. This metallic-solvent-based
route enables low-temperature fabrication of metallic nanoarchitectures
with tailored porosity. By demonstrating large-surface-area and scalable
hierarchical nanoporous metals, our work addresses the pressing demand
for these materials in various sectors.