Nature Nanotechnology | 2021

Unique surface patterns emerging during solidification of liquid metal alloys

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


It is well-understood that during the liquid-to-solid phase transition of alloys, elements segregate in the bulk phase with the formation of microstructures. In contrast, we show here that in a Bi–Ga alloy system, highly ordered nanopatterns emerge preferentially at the alloy surfaces during solidification. We observed a variety of transition, hybrid and crystal-defect-like patterns, in addition to lamellar and rod-like structures. Combining experiments and molecular dynamics simulations, we investigated the influence of the superficial Bi and Ga2O3 layers during surface solidification and elucidated the pattern-formation mechanisms, which involve surface-catalysed heterogeneous nucleation. We further demonstrated the dynamic nature and robustness of the phenomenon under different solidification conditions and for various alloy systems. The surface patterns we observed enable high-spatial-resolution nanoscale-infrared and surface-enhanced Raman mapping, which reveal promising potential for surface- and nanoscale-based applications. During a liquid-to-solid phase transition, a Bi–Ga alloy forms ordered nanostructured patterns on its surface.

Volume 16
Pages 431 - 439
DOI 10.1038/s41565-020-00835-7
Language English
Journal Nature Nanotechnology

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