posted on 2023-05-30, 13:38authored byHaiwen Dai, Sofia Dimitriadou, P. S. Sankara Rama Krishnan, Albertus Denny Handoko, Jose Recatala-Gomez, Yong Wang, D. V. Maheswar Repaka, Maung Thway, Chenguang Zhang, Martial Duchamp, Kedar Hippalgaonkar
Development of nanoscale multicomponent solid inorganic
materials
is often hindered by slow solid diffusion kinetics and poor precursor
mixing in conventional solid-state synthesis. These shortcomings can
be alleviated by combining nanosized precursor mixtures and low temperature
reaction, which could reduce crystal growth and accelerate the solid
diffusion at the same time. However, high throughput production of
nanoparticle mixtures with tunable composition via conventional synthesis
is very challenging. In this work, we demonstrate that ∼10
nm homogeneous mixing of sub-10 nm nanoparticles can be achieved via
spark nanomixing at room temperature and pressure. Kinetically driven
Spark
Plasma Discharge nanoparticle generation and ambient processing conditions
limit particle coarsening and agglomeration, resulting in sub-10 nm
primary particles of as-deposited films. The intimate mixing of these
nanosized precursor particles enables intraparticle diffusion and
formation of Cu/Ni nanoalloy during subsequent low temperature annealing
at 100 °C. We also discovered that cross-particle diffusion is
promoted during the low-temperature sulfurization of Cu/Ag which tends
to phase-segregate, eventually leading to the growth of sulfide nanocrystals
and improved homogeneity. High elemental homogeneity, small diffusion
path lengths, and high diffusibility synergically contribute to faster
diffusion kinetics of sub-10 nm nanoparticle mixtures. The combination
of ∼10 nm homogeneous precursors via spark nanomixing, low-temperature
annealing, and a wide range of potentially compatible materials makes
our approach a good candidate as a general platform toward accelerated
solid state synthesis of nanomaterials.