0
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. Remediation Sign in to save

Magnetically steerable iron oxides-manganese dioxide core–shell micromotors for organic and microplastic removals

Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 2020 142 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.
Heng Ye, Hao Yuan, Yong Wang, Xiaojia Liu, Shaobin Wang Dandan Xu, Shaobin Wang Hongqi Sun, Shaobin Wang Hao Yuan, Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Hongqi Sun, Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Hongqi Sun, Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Xing Ma, Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang Shaobin Wang

Summary

Magnetically steerable iron oxide-manganese dioxide core-shell micromotors were developed for active removal of contaminants from water. The micromotors could be guided using an external magnetic field to collect and remove pollutants, including microplastics, in a targeted and recoverable manner.

Because of micro/nanoscale manipulation and task-performing capability, micro/nanomotors (MNMs) have attracted lots of research interests for potential applications in biomedical and environmental applications. Owing to the low-cost, good motion behavior, and environmental friendliness, various low-cost metal oxides based MNMs become promising alternatives to the precious metal based MNMs, in particular for environmental remediation applications. Hereby, we demonstrate the facile and scalable fabrication of two types of bubble-propelled iron oxides-MnO core-shell micromotors (FeO-MnO and FeO-MnO) for pollutant removal. The FeO-MnO micromotor exhibits efficient removals of both aqueous organics and suspended microplastics via the synergy of catalytic degradation, surface adsorption, and adsorptive bubbles separations mechanisms. The adsorptive bubbles separation achieved more than 10% removal of the suspended microplastics from the polluted water in 2 h. We clarified the major contributions of different remediation mechanisms in pollutants removals, and the findings may be beneficial to a wide range of environmental applications of MNMs.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper