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Magnetically boosted 1D photoactive microswarm for COVID-19 face mask disruption

Nature Communications 2023 40 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jeonghyo Kim, Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Martin Pumera Jeonghyo Kim, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, Carmen C. Mayorga‐Martinez, 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 magnetically powered microswarms that can degrade COVID-19 face masks into smaller fragments, offering a potential approach to breaking down pandemic-related plastic waste that would otherwise persist in the environment as microplastics.

Polymers

The recent COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in the massive discard of pandemic-related plastic wastes, causing serious ecological harm and a high societal burden. Most single-use face masks are made of synthetic plastics, thus their careless disposal poses a direct threat to wildlife as well as potential ecotoxicological effects in the form of microplastics. Here, we introduce a 1D magnetic photoactive microswarm capable of actively navigating, adhering to, and accelerating the degradation of the polypropylene microfiber of COVID-19 face masks. 1D microrobots comprise an anisotropic magnetic core (Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>) and photocatalytic shell (Bi<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>/Ag), which enable wireless magnetic maneuvering and visible-light photocatalysis. The actuation of a programmed rotating magnetic field triggers a fish schooling-like 1D microswarm that allows active interfacial interactions with the microfiber network. The follow-up light illumination accelerates the disruption of the polypropylene microfiber through the photo-oxidative process as corroborated by morphological, compositional, and structural analyses. The active magnetic photocatalyst microswarm suggests an intriguing microrobotic solution to treat various plastic wastes and other environmental pollutants.

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