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Methamphetamine Removal from Aquatic Environments by Magnetic Microrobots with Cyclodextrin Chiral Recognition Elements

Small 2024 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Martin Pumera Paula Mayorga Burrezo, Martin Pumera Paula Mayorga Burrezo, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Martin Pumera Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Martin Pumera Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Kuchař, Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera

Summary

Researchers developed magnetic microrobots functionalized with cyclodextrin to remove methamphetamine from aquatic environments, addressing the failure of conventional wastewater treatment to eliminate this emerging pharmaceutical contaminant. The microrobots combined selective drug capture by cyclodextrin with magnetic recovery from treated water.

Study Type Environmental

The growing consumption of drugs of abuse together with the inefficiency of the current wastewater treatment plants toward their presence has resulted in an emergent class of pollutants. Thus, the development of alternative approaches to remediate this environmental threat is urgently needed. Microrobots, combining autonomous motion with great tunability for the development of specific tasks, have turned into promising candidates to take on the challenge. Here, hybrid urchin-like hematite (α-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>) microparticles carrying magnetite (Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>) nanoparticles and surface functionalization with organic β-cyclodextrin (CD) molecules are prepared with the aim of on-the-fly encapsulation of illicit drugs into the linked CD cavities of moving microrobots. The resulting mag-CD microrobots are tested against methamphetamine (MA), proving their ability for the removal of this psychoactive substance. A dramatically enhanced capture of MA from water with active magnetically powered microrobots when compared with static passive CD-modified particles is demonstrated. This work shows the advantages of enhanced mass transfer provided by the externally controlled magnetic navigation in microrobots that together with the versatility of their design is an efficient strategy to clean polluted waters.

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