4.8 Article

Trapping and detecting nanoplastics by MXene-derived oxide microrobots

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-31161-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (Czech Republic) grant LL2002 under ERC CZ program
  2. European Union [101038066]
  3. project Advanced Functional Nanorobots - EFRR [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/15_003/0000444]
  4. ESF [CZ.02.2.69/0.0/0.0/18_053/0016962]
  5. MEYS CR [LM2018110]

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This study demonstrates the capture and detection of nanoplastics using photogravitactic MXene-derived microrobots. These microrobots are self-propelled and have the ability to magnetically collect nanoplastics, providing a new approach for screening and remediation of nanoplastic pollution in water.
Nanoplastic water pollution represents an increasing concern. Here, photogravitactic MXene-derived microrobots are programmed to trap nanoplastics in the layered structure and magnetically transfer them to low-cost electrodes for further detection. Nanoplastic pollution, the final product of plastic waste fragmentation in the environment, represents an increasing concern for the scientific community due to the easier diffusion and higher hazard associated with their small sizes. Therefore, there is a pressing demand for effective strategies to quantify and remove nanoplastics in wastewater. This work presents the on-the-fly capture of nanoplastics in the three-dimensional (3D) space by multifunctional MXene-derived oxide microrobots and their further detection. A thermal annealing process is used to convert Ti3C2Tx MXene into photocatalytic multi-layered TiO2, followed by the deposition of a Pt layer and the decoration with magnetic gamma-Fe2O3 nanoparticles. The MXene-derived gamma-Fe2O3/Pt/TiO2 microrobots show negative photogravitaxis, resulting in a powerful fuel-free motion with six degrees of freedom under light irradiation. Owing to the unique combination of self-propulsion and programmable Zeta potential, the microrobots can quickly attract and trap nanoplastics on their surface, including the slits between multi-layer stacks, allowing their magnetic collection. Utilized as self-motile preconcentration platforms, they enable nanoplastics' electrochemical detection using low-cost and portable electrodes. This proof-of-concept study paves the way toward the on-site screening of nanoplastics in water and its successive remediation.

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