New 2D alloy combines five metals, breaks down CO2 It's first demonstrated use of a 2D, multi-metallic alloy Mishra Lab Scanning transmission electron microscope images of a high entropy transition metal dichalcogenide alloy flake in its entirety and an atom-resolved section. Monochromatic images depict the distribution of different elements. Zoom in ").addClass("image-details"); var $imageCaption = $("").addClass("image-caption").text(caption); $imageDetails.append($imageCaption); element = $(" ").append('×').append($imageHolder).append($imageDetails)[0]; img.draggable = false; if (title) { element.title = title; } if (altText) { element.alt = altText; } $(img).on("load error", callbackWrapper); img.src = url; return element; } A two-dimensional alloy material -- made from five metals as opposed to the traditional two -- has been developed by a collaboration between researchers at the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis and researchers at the College of Engineering at the University of Illinois at Chicago.