RMIT University
Browse

Applications of liquid metals in nanotechnology

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:44 authored by Francois-Marie Allioux, Mohammad Ghasemian, Wanjie Xie, Anthony O'Mullane, Torben DaenekeTorben Daeneke, Michael Dickey, Kourosh Kalantar ZadehKourosh Kalantar Zadeh
Post-transition liquid metals (LMs) offer new opportunities for accessing exciting dynamics for nanomaterials. As entities with free electrons and ions as well as fluidity, LM-based nanomaterials are fundamentally different from their solid counterparts. The low melting points of most post-transition metals (less than 330 °C) allow for the formation of nanodroplets from bulk metal melts under mild mechanical and chemical conditions. At the nanoscale, these liquid state nanodroplets simultaneously offer high electrical and thermal conductivities, tunable reactivities and useful physicochemical properties. They also offer specific alloying and dealloying conditions for the formation of multi-elemental liquid based nanoalloys or the synthesis of engineered solid nanomaterials. To date, while only a few nanosized LM materials have been investigated, extraordinary properties have been observed for such systems. Multi-elemental nanoalloys have shown controllable homogeneous or heterogeneous core and surface compositions with interfacial ordering at the nanoscale. The interactions and synergies of nanosized LMs with polymeric, inorganic and bio-materials have also resulted in new compounds. This review highlights recent progress and future directions for the synthesis and applications of post-transition LMs and their alloys. The review presents the unique properties of these LM nanodroplets for developing functional materials for electronics, sensors, catalysts, energy systems, and nanomedicine and biomedical applications, as well as other functional systems engineered at the nanoscale.

Funding

Re-discovering liquid metals from core to surface

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Journal

Nanoscale Horizons

Volume

7

Issue

2

Start page

141

End page

167

Total pages

27

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022

Former Identifier

2006113466

Esploro creation date

2022-05-17

Usage metrics

    Scholarly Works

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC