ZnO-based micromotors fueled by CO2: the first example of self-reorientation-induced biomimetic chemotaxis

Author:

Mou Fangzhi1,Xie Qi1,Liu Jianfeng1,Che Shengping1,Bahmane Lamya1,You Ming1,Guan Jianguo1

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Materials Synthesis and Processing, International of Materials Science and Engineering, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan 430070, China

Abstract

Abstract Synthetic chemotactic micro/nanomotors are envisioned to actively ‘seek out’ targets by following specific chemicals, but they are mainly powered by bioincompatible fuels and only show pseudochemotaxis (or advanced chemokinesis) due to their weak self-reorientation capabilities. Here we demonstrate that synthetic ZnO-based Janus micromotors can be powered by the alternative biocompatible fuel of CO2, and further provide the first example of self-reorientation-induced biomimetic chemotaxis using them. The ZnO-based micromotors are highly sensitive to dissolved CO2 in water, which enables the corrosion of ZnO to continuously occur by providing H+ through hydration. Thus, they can autonomously move even in water exposed to air based on self-diffusiophoresis. Furthermore, they can sense the local CO2 gradient and perform positive chemotaxis by self-reorientations under the phoretic torque. Our discovery opens a gate to developing intelligent micro/nanomotors powered by, and sensitive to, biocompatible atmospheric or endogenous gaseous chemicals for biomedical and environmental applications.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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