TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of Minor Alloy Components on the Electrocapillarity and Electrochemistry of Liquid Metal Fractals
AU - Yu, Ruohan
AU - Han, Jialuo
AU - Chi, Yuan
AU - Zheng, Jiewei
AU - Fuchs, Richard
AU - Ghasemian, Mohammad B.
AU - Rahim, Md Arifur
AU - Tang, Shi Yang
AU - Mao, Guangzhao
AU - Kalantar-Zadeh, Kourosh
AU - Tang, Jianbo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Functional Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2024/8/6
Y1 - 2024/8/6
N2 - Exploring and controlling surface tension-driven phenomena in liquid metals may lead to unprecedented possibilities for next-generation microfluidics, electronics, catalysis, and materials synthesis. In pursuit of these goals, the impact of minor constituents within liquid alloys is largely overlooked. Herein, it is showed that the presence of a fraction of solute metals such as tin, bismuth, and zinc in liquid gallium can significantly influence their electrocapillarity and electrochemistry. The instability-driven fractal formation of liquid alloy droplets is investigated with different solutes and reveals the formation of distinctive non-branched droplets, unstable fractals, and stable fractal modes under controlled voltage and alkaline solution conditions. In their individually unique fractal morphology diagrams, different liquid alloys demonstrate significantly shifted voltage thresholds in transition between the three fractal modes, depending on the choice of the solute metal. Surface tension measurements, cycle voltammetry and surface compositional characterizations provide strong evidence that the minor alloy components drastically alter the surface tension, surface electrochemical oxidation, and oxide dissolution processes that govern the droplet deformation and instability dynamics. The findings that minor components are able to regulate liquid alloys’ surface tensions, surface element distributions and electrochemical activities offer great promises for harnessing the tunability and functionality of liquid metals.
AB - Exploring and controlling surface tension-driven phenomena in liquid metals may lead to unprecedented possibilities for next-generation microfluidics, electronics, catalysis, and materials synthesis. In pursuit of these goals, the impact of minor constituents within liquid alloys is largely overlooked. Herein, it is showed that the presence of a fraction of solute metals such as tin, bismuth, and zinc in liquid gallium can significantly influence their electrocapillarity and electrochemistry. The instability-driven fractal formation of liquid alloy droplets is investigated with different solutes and reveals the formation of distinctive non-branched droplets, unstable fractals, and stable fractal modes under controlled voltage and alkaline solution conditions. In their individually unique fractal morphology diagrams, different liquid alloys demonstrate significantly shifted voltage thresholds in transition between the three fractal modes, depending on the choice of the solute metal. Surface tension measurements, cycle voltammetry and surface compositional characterizations provide strong evidence that the minor alloy components drastically alter the surface tension, surface electrochemical oxidation, and oxide dissolution processes that govern the droplet deformation and instability dynamics. The findings that minor components are able to regulate liquid alloys’ surface tensions, surface element distributions and electrochemical activities offer great promises for harnessing the tunability and functionality of liquid metals.
KW - electrocapillary
KW - electrochemical oxidation
KW - fractal modes
KW - liquid metals
KW - surface tension
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85159703410
U2 - 10.1002/adfm.202301348
DO - 10.1002/adfm.202301348
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85159703410
SN - 1616-301X
VL - 34
JO - Advanced Functional Materials
JF - Advanced Functional Materials
IS - 31
M1 - 2301348
ER -