Abstract

Postsynthetic chemical transformation provides a powerful platform for creating heteronanostructures (HNs) with well-defined materials and interfaces that generate synergy or enhancement. However, it remains a synthetic bottleneck for the precise construction of HNs with increased degrees of complexity and more elaborate functions in a predictable manner. Herein, we define a general transformative protocol for metal phosphosulfide HNs based on tunable hexagonal Cu1.81S frameworks with corner-, edge- and face-controlled growth of Co2P domains. The region-controlled Cu1.81S-Co2P framework interfaces can serve as "kinetic barriers" in mediating the direction and rate between P and S anion exchange reactions, thus leading to a family of morphology and phase designed Cu3P1-xSx-Co2P HNs with hollow (branched, dotted and crown), porous and core-shell architectures. This study reveals the internal transformation mechanism between metal sulfide and phosphide nanocrystals, and opens up a new way for the rational synthesis of metastable HNs that are otherwise inaccessible.

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