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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Light‐Powered Self‐Adaptive Mesostructured Microrobots for Simultaneous Microplastics Trapping and Fragmentation via in situ Surface Morphing

Small 2023 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Martin Pumera Sanjay Gopal Ullattil, Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Sanjay Gopal Ullattil, Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Sanjay Gopal Ullattil, 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 Martin Pumera

Summary

Researchers developed light-powered microrobots made from titanium dioxide that can both trap and break down microplastics in water. These tiny robots use sunlight to change their surface shape, catching microplastic particles and then fragmenting them through photocatalytic reactions. This innovative technology could offer a practical way to clean microplastic pollution from water sources.

Microplastics, which comprise one of the omnipresent threats to human health, are diverse in shape and composition. Their negative impacts on human and ecosystem health provide ample incentive to design and execute strategies to trap and degrade diversely structured microplastics, especially from water. This work demonstrates the fabrication of single-component TiO<sub>2</sub> superstructured microrobots to photo-trap and photo-fragment microplastics. In a single reaction, rod-like microrobots diverse in shape and with multiple trapping sites, are fabricated to exploit the asymmetry of the microrobotic system advantageous for propulsion. The microrobots work synergistically to photo-catalytically trap and fragment microplastics in water in a coordinated fashion. Hence, a microrobotic model of "unity in diversity" is demonstrated here for the phototrapping and photofragmentation of microplastics. During light irradiation and subsequent photocatalysis, the surface morphology of microrobots transformed into porous flower-like networks that trap microplastics for subsequent degradation. This reconfigurable microrobotic technology represents a significant step forward in the efforts to degrade microplastics.

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