Alkaline-Driven Liquid Metal Janus Micromotor with a Coating Material-Dependent Propulsion Mechanism

Qing Liu, Shuaishuai Meng, Tingting Zheng, Yaming Liu, Xing Ma*, Huanhuan Feng*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

22 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Micro/nanomotors have achieved huge progress in driving power divergence and accurate maneuver manipulations in the last two decades. However, there are still several obstacles to the potential biomedical applications, with respect to their biotoxicity and biocompatibility. Gallium- and indium-based liquid metal (LM) alloys are outstanding candidates for solving these issues due to their good biocompatibility and low biotoxicity. Hereby, we fabricate LM Janus micromotors (LMJMs) through ultrasonically dispersing GaInSn LM into microparticles and sputtering different materials as demanded to tune their moving performance. These LMJMs can move in alkaline solution due to the reaction between Ga and NaOH. There are two driving mechanisms when sputtering materials are metallic or nonmetallic. One is self-electrophoresis when sputtering materials are metallic, and the other one is self-diffusiophoresis when sputtering materials are nonmetallic. Our LMJMs can flip between those two modes by varying the deposited materials. The self-electrophoresis-driven LMJMs' moving speed is much faster than the self-diffusiophoresis-driven LMJMs' speed. The reason is that the former occurs galvanic corrosion reaction, while the latter is correlated to chemical corrosion reaction. The switching of the driving mechanism of the LMJMs can be used to fit into different biochemical application scenarios.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)35897-35904
Number of pages8
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume13
Issue number30
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Aug 2021
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society.

Keywords

  • alkaline-driven Janus micromotor
  • liquid metal
  • reactive sputter deposition
  • self-diffusiophoresis
  • self-electrophoresis

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