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Multiwavelength-Steerable Visible-Light-Driven Magnetic CoO-TiO2 Microswimmers.

Varun SridharByung-Wook ParkSurong GuoPeter A van AkenMetin Sitti
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
While current light-driven microswimmers require high-intensity light, UV light, or toxic fuels to propel them, powering them with low-intensity UV-free visible light without fuels is essential to enable their potential high-impact applications. Therefore, in this study, a new material for light-driven microswimmers in the form of CoO is introduced. Janus CoO-TiO2 microswimmers powered with low-intensity, UV-free visible light inside water without using any toxic fuels like H2O2 is proposed. The microswimmers show propulsion under full spectrum of visible light with 17 times lower intensity than the mean solar intensity. They propel by breaking down water into oxygen and oxide radicals, which enables their potential applications for photocatalysis and drug delivery. The microswimmers are multiwavelength responsive, from the ultraviolet to the infrared region. The direction of swimming changes with the change in the illumination from the visible to UV light. In addition to being responsive, they are wavelength steerable and exhibit inherent magnetic properties enabling magnetic steering control of the CoO-TiO2 microswimmers. Thus, these microswimmers, which are propelled under low-intensity visible light, have direction-changing capability using light of different wavelengths, and have steering control capability by external magnetic fields, could be used in future potential applications, such as active and local cargo delivery, active photocatalysis, and hydrogen evolution.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • high intensity
  • drug delivery
  • molecularly imprinted
  • cancer therapy
  • resistance training
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • aqueous solution
  • mass spectrometry
  • drug release