Pt–Rh is an important alloy due to its catalytic activity in different reactions. In the past it was assumed that Pt–Rh is immiscible at low temperatures [
1–
2], but theoretical studies revealed that Pt–Rh forms the intermetallic phases 40 and
D0
22 [
3], which are thermodynamically stable below room temperature according to a recently published theoretical phase diagram [
4] (see for the 40 and
D0
22 structures).
Boundaries in a bulk phase diagram are well defined in the case of the thermodynamic limit (

), where first-order phase transitions are indicated by singularities in the grand canonical potential [
5]. In the case of finite systems, however, the thermodynamic limit cannot be used, and as a consequence there are no sharp first-order phase transitions in the canonical and the grand canonical ensemble [
6] and therefore different theories are needed in order to describe small systems. The thermodynamics of small systems has been developed by Hill as early as 1963 [
6], but recently regained interest due to its applicability in modern nanoscience and engineering. The theory was recently redeveloped on a more intuitive foundation [
7] under the term “nanothermodynamics” [
8] by the same author. Recent microcanonical approaches pioneered by Gross et al. [
9–
10] explore the topology of the entropy surface
S(
E,N
i) as a function of the energy
E and the particle number
N. Studying the entropy surface in the microcanonical ensemble can be a useful theoretical tool, because convex intruders of the entropy can be used as a concept to assign first-order transitions even in finite systems, and additional quantities, such as the interface tension between phases, become accessible [
9]. A quantitative assessment of the entropy surface is in principle possible by the Wang–Landau algorithm [
11] but a tedious task for a more complex Hamiltonian. Furthermore, the choice of the microcanonical ensemble corresponds to a completely isolated system, which does not exchange energy with its environment. Such conditions are experimentally possible [
10], but hard to realize and clearly not satisfied for the case of nanoparticles in equilibrium with their substrate.
Phase equilibria between solid and liquid phases in binary alloy particles were, for example, investigated for Cu–Ni [
12], Sn–Bi [
13], Pb–Bi [
14] and other eutectics [
15–
17], as well as for miscible alloys [
18–
20]. In addition, there are some studies related to the phase diagrams of solid–solid phase equilibria of alloys with a miscibility gap [
21–
23]. Such a case has also recently been experimentally studied for the case of Au–Pt [
23]. More general thermodynamic treatments of phase separation in nanoparticles were given by Wautelet et al. [
22] and Norskov et al. [
21]. The latter authors focused especially on phase equilibria of immiscible Ag–Cu nanoparticles by means of Monte Carlo simulations and found that for all studied alloys phase separation becomes impossible below a certain critical size at any temperature [
21]. Significantly fewer studies are found on ordering nanoalloys. Recently, a study on the equilibrium ordering properties of Au–Pd bulk and nanoalloys was published by Atanasov and Hou [
24]. Ordering Fe–Pt nanoalloys were studied by means of lattice Monte Carlo simulations [
25].
However, as far as we know, a complete size-dependent phase diagram of an ordering nanoalloy has not yet been studied. It is our intention to examine such a size-dependent phase diagram by using the model system of Pt–Rh particles and thereby extending our previous results for bulk Pt–Rh to the nano regime. We will first give a short review of the refined BOS mixing model. This model will then be parameterized for Pt–Rh particles. The resulting phase diagrams for three different particle sizes will finally be discussed. We address the question of how to interpret a two-phase equilibrium in the particle, and the effects related to surface segregation are examined. Furthermore, we evaluate the Warren–Cowley short-range order (WC-SRO) parameters in order to investigate the order–disorder phase transitions in the particles. These parameters prove to be useful in order to assign a critical temperature to the smooth phase transitions in this finite system.