4.6 Article

Pattern formation during electrochemical and liquid metal dealloying

Journal

MRS BULLETIN
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 27-34

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1557/mrs.2017.301

Keywords

nanostructure; diffusion; morphology; self-assembly

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation DMR Program [DMR-1402726]
  2. US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DEFG02-07ER46400]

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Dealloying has evolved from a problematic corrosion process to a versatile tool for scalable fabrication of nanostructured metals. While the original, and majority of, work in the area has focused on electrochemical dealloying, a powerful variation of dealloyingliquid metal dealloyinghas recently gained popularity. This process relies on a melt to carry out selective dissolution, replacing the traditional electrolyte solution. While electrolytes and molten metals are both suitable dealloying media, they can lead to very different morphologies. In this article, we compare and contrast what is known about the microscale physics and chemistry controlling microstructural evolution in electrochemical and liquid metal dealloying. We conclude that the core phenomenology of porosity evolutiona competition between dissolution and interface diffusionis similar in both dealloying processes, but that the relative magnitudes of these two processes control interfacial pattern formation.

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