A Maze in Plastic Wastes: Autonomous Motile Photocatalytic Microrobots against Microplastics

. 2021 Jun 02 ; 13 (21) : 25102-25110. [epub] 20210519

Status PubMed-not-MEDLINE Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké Médium print-electronic

Typ dokumentu časopisecké články

Perzistentní odkaz   https://www.medvik.cz/link/pmid34009926

An extremely high quantity of small pieces of synthetic polymers, namely, microplastics, has been recently identified in some of the most intact natural environments, e.g., on top of the Alps and Antarctic ice. This is a "scary wake-up call", considering the potential risks of microplastics for humans and marine systems. Sunlight-driven photocatalysis is the most energy-efficient currently known strategy for plastic degradation; however, attaining efficient photocatalyst-plastic interaction and thus an effective charge transfer in the micro/nanoscale is very difficult; that adds up to the common challenges of heterogeneous photocatalysis including low solubility, precipitation, and aggregation of the photocatalysts. Here, an active photocatalytic degradation procedure based on intelligent visible-light-driven microrobots with the capability of capturing and degrading microplastics "on-the-fly" in a complex multichannel maze is introduced. The robots with hybrid powers carry built-in photocatalytic (BiVO4) and magnetic (Fe3O4) materials allowing a self-propelled motion under sunlight with the possibility of precise actuation under a magnetic field inside the macrochannels. The photocatalytic robots are able to efficiently degrade different synthetic microplastics, particularly polylactic acid, polycaprolactone, thanks to the generated local self-stirring effect in the nanoscale and enhanced interaction with microplastics without using any exterior mechanical stirrers, typically used in conventional systems. Overall, this proof-of-concept study using microrobots with hybrid wireless powers has shown for the first time the possibility of efficient degradation of ultrasmall plastic particles in confined complex spaces, which can impact research on microplastic treatments, with the final goal of diminishing microplastics as an emergent threat for humans and marine ecosystems.

Citace poskytuje Crossref.org

Nejnovějších 20 citací...

Zobrazit více v
Medvik | PubMed

On-the-Fly Monitoring of the Capture and Removal of Nanoplastics with Nanorobots

. 2024 Aug 21 ; 4 (4) : 243-249. [epub] 20240409

Magnetically boosted 1D photoactive microswarm for COVID-19 face mask disruption

. 2023 Feb 20 ; 14 (1) : 935. [epub] 20230220

Smart micro- and nanorobots for water purification

. 2023 ; 1 (4) : 236-251. [epub] 20230206

Trapping and detecting nanoplastics by MXene-derived oxide microrobots

. 2022 Jun 22 ; 13 (1) : 3573. [epub] 20220622

Micromachines for Microplastics Treatment

. 2022 Jun 15 ; 2 (3) : 225-232. [epub] 20220214

Najít záznam

Citační ukazatele

Nahrávání dat ...

Možnosti archivace

Nahrávání dat ...