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Light and Magnetism Orchestrating Aquatic Pollutant-Degradation Robots in Programmable Trajectories.

Hongbo ZhangLingzhuang MengYan ZhangQiangwei XinYuhang ZhouZhengxin MaLiangrui ZuoChuyi ZhengJun LuoYahong ZhouChunmei DingJianshu Li
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
Interfacial floating robots have promising applications in carriers, environmental monitoring, water treatment, and so on. Even though, engineering smart robots with both precisely efficient navigation and elimination of water pollutants in long term remains a challenge, as the superhydrophobicity greatly lowers resistance for aquatic motion while sacrificing chemical reactivity of the surface. Here, a pollutant-removing superhydrophobic robot integrated with well-assembled iron oxide-bismuth sulfide heterojunction composite minerals, which provide both light and magnetic propulsion, and the ability of catalytic degradation, is reported. The motion velocity of the robot reaches up to 51.9 mm s -1 within only 300 ms of acceleration under the orchestration of light, and brakes rapidly (≈200-300 ms) once turn off the light. And magnetism extends the robot to work in broad range of surface tensions in any programmable trajectory. Besides, purification of polluted water is efficiently achieved in situ and the degradation efficiency exhibits eightfold enhancements under the effect of light-triggered photothermal behavior coupled with magnetic induction, overcoming the dilemma of efficient motion with catalytic superhydrophobicity. This strategy developed here provides guidelines for the explorations of high-performance smart devices.
Keyphrases
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