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Mechanism behind the controlled generation of liquid metal nanoparticles by mechanical agitation

Nor-Azman, Nur-Adania and Ghasemian, Mohammad B. and Fuchs, Richard and Liu, Li and Widjajana, Moonika S. and Yu, Ruohan and Chiu, Shih-Hao and A. Idrus-Saidi, Shuhada and Nieves Flores, Nieves Flores and Chi, Yuan and Tang, Jianbo and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kourosh (2024) Mechanism behind the controlled generation of liquid metal nanoparticles by mechanical agitation. ACS Nano, 18 (17). pp. 11139-11152. ISSN 1936-0851

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.3c12638

Abstract

The size-controlled synthesis of liquid metal nanoparticles is necessary in a variety of applications. Sonication is a common method for breaking down bulk liquid metals into small particles, yet the influence of critical factors such as liquid metal composition has remained elusive. Our study employs high-speed imaging to unravel the mechanism of liquid metal particle formation during mechanical agitation. Gallium-based liquid metals, with and without secondary metals of bismuth, indium, and tin, are analyzed to observe the effect of cavitation and surface eruption during sonication and particle release. The impact of the secondary metal inclusion is investigated on liquid metals’ surface tension, solution turbidity, and size distribution of the generated particles. Our work evidences that there is an inverse relationship between the surface tension and the ability of liquid metals to be broken down by sonication. We show that even for 0.22 at. % of bismuth in gallium, the surface tension is significantly decreased from 558 to 417 mN/m (measured in Milli-Q water), resulting in an enhanced particle generation rate: 3.6 times increase in turbidity and ∼43% reduction in the size of particles for bismuth in gallium liquid alloy compared to liquid gallium for the same sonication duration. The effect of particles’ size on the photocatalysis of the annealed particles is also presented to show the applicability of the process in a proof-of-concept demonstration. This work contributes to a broader understanding of the synthesis of nanoparticles, with controlled size and characteristics, via mechanical agitation of liquid metals for diverse applications.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:gallium-based alloy, liquid metal particle, sonication, surface tension, turbidity
Subjects:T Technology > TP Chemical technology
Divisions:Chemical and Energy Engineering
ID Code:108749
Deposited By: Widya Wahid
Deposited On:11 Dec 2024 09:24
Last Modified:11 Dec 2024 09:24

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