The compositional space of high-entropy-alloy
nanoparticles (HEA
NPs) significantly expands the diversity of the materials library.
Every atom in HEA NPs has a different elemental coordination environment,
which requires knowledge of the local electronic structure at an atomic
level. However, such structure has not been disclosed experimentally
or theoretically. We synthesized HEA NPs composed of all eight noble-metal-group
elements (NM-HEA) for the first time. Their electronic structure was
revealed by hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and density function
theory calculations with NP models. The NM-HEA NPs have a lower degeneracy
in energy level compared with the monometallic NPs, which is a common
feature of HEA NPs. The local density of states (LDOS) of every surface
atom was first revealed. Some atoms of the same constituent element
in HEA NPs have different LDOS profiles, whereas atoms of other elements
have similar LDOS profiles. In other words, one atom in HEA loses
its elemental identity and it may be possible to create an ideal LDOS
by adjusting the neighboring atoms. The tendency of the electronic
structure change was shown by supervised learning. The NM-HEA NPs
showed 10.8-times higher intrinsic activity for hydrogen evolution
reaction than commercial Pt/C, which is one of the best catalysts.
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