4.8 Article

Hybrid Inorganic-Organic Visible-Light-Driven Microrobots Based on Donor-Acceptor Organic Polymer for Degradation of Toxic Psychoactive Substances

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 18458-18468

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c08136

Keywords

microrobots; photocatalyst; conjugated polymer; donor-acceptor; drugs of abuse

Funding

  1. project Advanced Functional Nanorobots (EFRR) [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/15_003/0000444]
  2. project MICR [VJ01010065]

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This study presents hybrid inorganic-organic photoactive microrobots with a tubular shape, fabricated by combining mesoporous silica templates with an active polymer. These microrobots show efficient directional motion under fuel-free conditions and are capable of capturing and degrading toxic psychoactive drugs found in wastewater. This approach represents a versatile and low-cost strategy for fabricating structured organic microrobots with efficient motion capabilities.
Light-driven microrobots based on organic semiconductors have received tremendous attention in the past few years due to their unique properties, such as ease of reactivity tunability, band-gap modulation, and low cost. However, their fabrication with defined morphologies is a very challenging task that results in amorphous microrobots with poor motion efficiencies. Herein, we present hybrid inorganic-organic photoactive microrobots with a tubular shape and based on the combination of a mesoporous silica template with an active polymer containing thiophene and triazine units (named as Tz-Th microrobots). Owing to their well-defined tubular structure, such Tz-Th microrobots showed efficient directional motion under fuel-free conditions. Depending on the accumulation of the polymer coating, these microdevices also exhibited stand-up and rotation motion. As a proof-of-concept, we use these hybrid microrobots for the capture and degradation of toxic psychoactive drugs commonly found in wastewater effluents such as methamphetamine derivatives. We found that the microrobots were able to decompose the drug into small organic fragments after 20 min of visible light irradiation, reaching total intermediates removal after 2 h. Therefore, this approach represents a versatile and low-cost strategy to fabricate structured organic microrobots with efficient directional motion by using inorganic materials as the robot chassis, thereby maintaining the superior photocatalytic performance usually associated with such organic polymers.

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