Affiliation:
1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA
2. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA
3. Research Laboratory of Electronics Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA
Abstract
AbstractDecarbonizing food production and mitigating agriculture's environmental impact require new technologies for precise delivery of fertilizers and pesticides to plants. The cuticle, a waxy barrier that protects the surface of leaves, causes 60%–90% runoff of fertilizers and pesticides, leading to the wastage of intensive resources, soil depletion, and water bodies pollution. Solutions to mitigate runoff include adding chemicals (e.g., surfactants) to decrease surface tension and enhance cuticles' permeability but have low efficacy. In this study, vapor‐induced synergistic differentiation (VISDi) is used to nanomanufacture echinate pollen‐like, high payload content (≈50 wt%) microcapsules decorated with robust spines that mechanically disrupt the cuticle and adhere to the leaf. VISDi induces a core–shell structure in the spines, enabling the release of agrochemicals from the microparticles' body into the leaf. As proof of concept, precise and highthroughput delivery of iron fertilizer in Fe‐deficient spinach plants is demonstrated. Spray of spiny microparticles improves leaf adhesion by mechanical interlocking, reduces wash‐off by an ≈12.5 fold, and enhances chlorophyll content by ≈7.3 times compared to the application of spherical counterparts. Together, these results show that spiny microparticles can mitigate agricultural runoff and provide a high‐throughput tool for precise plant drug delivery.
Funder
Office of Naval Research
National Research Foundation
Cited by
2 articles.
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