4.8 Article

Plasmonic-Enhanced Graphene Oxide-Based Aquatic Robot for Target Cargo Delivery

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 1503-1510

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c18542

Keywords

plasmonic-enhanced photothermal effect; graphene oxide; light-driven aquatic robot; targeted cargo delivery; independent functional module

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [61922093, U1813211, 61773326]
  2. Shenzhen Key Basic Research projection [JCYJ20200109114827177]

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The proposed plasmonic-enhanced graphene oxide-gold nanorod/calcium alginate aquatic robot design addresses the challenges of high-speed motion, precise direction control, and efficient actuation in aquatic environments, achieving high traveling speed and good control over position and posture. The robot exhibits programmable trajectory following, multirobot gathering, separation, and cooperation capabilities, providing an efficient solution for cargo delivery.
The design and fabrication of light-actuated robots that can perform selective motions and targeted cargo delivery have attracted increasing interest in various fields. However, these robots' high-speed locomotion, precise direction control, and efficient actuation ability remain big challenges because of the relatively low photothermal efficiency, especially in the aquatic environment. This work proposes a plasmonic-enhanced graphene oxide (GO)-gold nanorod (Au NR)/calcium alginate (Ca-alginate) aquatic robot. The proposed robot design includes an independent power module (GO-Au NR layer) and a microscale cargo-loaded module (Ca-alginate layer). The plasmonic effect of Au NRs greatly improves the heat transfer efficiency, which in turn increases the temperature variation up to three times during the actuating process. This situation leads to a high traveling speed of the robot up to similar to 35 mm/s. Benefiting from the high light-to-work efficiency, the position and posture of the proposed robot have good control in the aquatic environment. The robot is capable of programmable trajectory following, multirobot gathering, separation, and cooperation, providing an efficient solution for cargo delivery. Moreover, after releasing the cargo-loaded module to the target location, the power module can be easily actuated for collection, avoiding the potential side effects from the residual photothermal particles in conventional methods. The plasmonic-enhanced photothermal mechanism and independent module design offer a strategy for light-actuated aquatic robot development and would bring opportunities to further develop biomedical applications.

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