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Ultrafast Growth and Locomotion of Dandelion‐Like Microswarms with Tubular Micromotors
Author(s) -
Lu Xiaolong,
Shen Hui,
Wei Ying,
Ge Hongbin,
Wang Joseph,
Peng Hanmin,
Liu Wenjuan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.202003678
Subject(s) - nanorobotics , nanotechnology , bubble , drag , oscillation (cell signaling) , zigzag , materials science , ultrashort pulse , robot , swarm behaviour , acoustics , computer science , mechanics , physics , artificial intelligence , chemistry , optics , laser , biochemistry , geometry , mathematics
Dynamic assembly and cooperation represent future frontiers for next generations of advanced micro/nano robots, but the required local interaction and communication cannot be directly translated from macroscale robots through the minimization because of tremendous technological challenges. Here, an ultrafast growth and locomotion methodology is presented for dandelion‐like microswarms assembled from catalytic tubular micromotors. With ultrasound oscillation of self‐generated bubbles, such microswarms could overcome the tremendous and chaotic drag force from extensive and disordered bubble generation in single units. Tubular MnO 2 micromotor individuals headed by self‐generated oxygen bubbles are ultrasonically driven to swim rapidly in surfactant‐free H 2 O 2 solutions. A large bubble core fused from multiple microbubbles is excited to oscillate and the resultant local intensified acoustic field attracts the individual micromotors to school around it, leading to a simultaneous growth of dandelion‐like microswarms. The bubble‐carried micromotor groups driven by ultrasound could swarm at a zigzag pattern with an average speed of up to 50 mm s −1 , which is validated in low H 2 O 2 concentrations. Additionally, such superfast locomotion could be ultrasonically modulated on demand. The ultrafast microswarm growth and locomotion strategy offers a new paradigm for constructing distinct dynamic assemblies and rapid transmission of artificial microrobots, paving the way to a myriad of promising applications.