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| A snowflake-like zinc crystal synthesized in liquid gallium by researchers at UNSW Sydney. Image Credit: Dr Jianbo Tang |
Researchers, including those from UNSW Sydney, have synthesized complex symmetrical zinc crystals in liquid gallium which can potentially be used in a range of catalysis applications.
It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas at UNSW Sydney’s School of Chemical Engineering where researchers have grown crystals made of zinc that look like snowflakes - inside a liquid metal.
The team predominantly used zinc metal dissolved in liquid gallium as the solvent, creating distinctive structures that often resembled those of six-branched snowflake crystals.
Apart from their structural beauty, these liquid metal-grown crystals can enable future processes for making catalytic materials for producing hydrogen from organic fuels. The metallic crystals can also be specially formulated, during their synthesis and extraction, to make semiconductors for electronic and optical devices of computers, mobile phones and solar cells of the future.
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