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  1. Bimetallic nanoparticles often show properties superior to their single-component counterparts. However, the large parameter space, including size, structure, composition, and spatial arrangement, impedes the discovery of the best nanoparticles for a given application. High-throughput methods that can control the composition and spatial arrangement of the nanoparticles are desirable for accelerated materials discovery. Herein, we report a methodology for synthesizing bimetallic alloy nanoparticle arrays with precise control over their composition and spatial arrangement. A dual-channel nanopipet is used, and nanofluidic control in the nanopipet further enables precise tuning of the electrodeposition rate of each element, which determines the final composition of the nanoparticle. The composition control is validated by finite element simulation as well as electrochemical and elemental analyses. The scope of the particles demonstrated includes Cu–Ag, Cu–Pt, Au–Pt, Cu–Pb, and Co–Ni. We further demonstrate surface patterning using Cu–Ag alloys with precise control of the location and composition of each pixel. Additionally, combining the nanoparticle alloy synthesis method with scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) allows for fast screening of electrocatalysts. The method is generally applicable for synthesizing metal nanoparticles that can be electrodeposited, which is important toward developing automated synthesis and screening systems for accelerated material discovery in electrocatalysis. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 28, 2024
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 3, 2024
  3. Galvanic replacement (GR) of monometallic nanoparticles (NPs) provides a versatile route to interesting bimetallic nanostructures, with examples such as nanoboxes, nanocages, nanoshells, nanorings, and heterodimers reported. The replacement of bimetallic templates by a more noble metal can generate trimetallic nanostructures with different architectures, where the specific structure has been shown to depend on the relative reduction potentials of the participating metals and lattice mismatch between the depositing and template metal phases. Now, the role of reaction stoichiometry is shown to direct the overall architecture of multimetallic nanostructures produced by GR with bimetallic templates. Specifically, the number of initial metal islands deposited on a NP template depends on the reaction stoichiometry. This outcome was established by studying the GR process between intermetallic PdCu (i-PdCu) NPs and either AuCl 2 − (Au 1+ ) or AuCl 4 − (Au 3+ ), producing i-PdCu–Au heterostructures. Significantly, multiple Au domains form in the case of GR with AuCl 2 − while only single Au domains form in the case of AuCl 4 − . These different NP architectures and their connection to reaction stoichiometry are consistent with Stranski–Krastanov (SK) growth, providing general guidelines on how the conditions of GR processes can be used to achieve multimetallic nanostructures with different defined architectures. 
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