Flash‐Thermal Shock Synthesis of High‐Entropy Alloys Toward High Performance Water Splitting
Jun‐Hwe Cha, Su‐Ho Cho, Dong‐Ha Kim, Dogyeong Jeon, Seohak Park, Ji‐Won Jung, Il‐Doo Kim, Sung‐Yool Choi- Mechanical Engineering
- Mechanics of Materials
- General Materials Science
Abstract
High‐entropy alloys (HEAs) provide unprecedented physicochemical properties over unary nanoparticles (NPs). According to the conventional alloying guideline (Hume‐Rothery rule), however, only size‐and‐structure similar elements can be mixed, limiting the possible combinations of alloying elements. Recently, it was reported that based on carbon thermal shocks (CTS) in a vacuum atmosphere at high temperature, ultrafast heating/cooling rates and high‐entropy environment play a critical role in synthesis of HEAs, ruling out possibility of phase separation. Since the CTS requires conducting supports, the Joule‐heating efficiencies rely on the carbon qualities, featuring difficulties in uniform heating along the large area. In this work, we propose a photo‐thermal approach as an alternative and innovative synthetic method that is compatible with ambient air, large‐area, remote process, and free of materials selection. Single flash irradiation on carbon nanofibers induced momentary high‐temperature annealing (> 1,800°C within 20‐ms duration, and ramping/cooling rates > 104 K/s) to successfully decorate HEA NPs up to 9 elements with excellent compatibility for large‐scale synthesis (6.0 × 6.0 cm2 of carbon nanofiber paper). To demonstrate their feasibility toward applications, senary HEA NPs (PtIrFeNiCoCe) were designed and screened, showing high activity (ηoverall = 777 mV) and excellent stability (>5,000 cycles) at the water splitting, including hydrogen evolution reactions and oxygen evolution reactions.
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