Issue 27, 2015

The gating effect by thousands of bubble-propelled micromotors in macroscale channels

Abstract

Increasing interest in the utilization of self-propelled micro-/nanomotors for environmental remediation requires the examination of their efficiency at the macroscale level. As such, we investigated the effect of micro-/nanomotors’ propulsion and bubbling on the rate of sodium hydroxide dissolution and the subsequent dispersion of OH ions across more than 30 cm, so as to understand how these factors might affect the dispersion of remediation agents in real systems which might require these agents to travel long distances to reach the pollutants. Experimental results showed that the presence of large numbers of active bubble-propelled tubular bimetallic Cu/Pt micromotors (4.5 × 104) induced a gating effect on the dissolution and dispersion process, slowing down the change in pH of the solution considerably. The retardation was found to be dependent on the number of active micromotors present in the range of 1.5 × 104 to 4.5 × 104 micromotors. At lower numbers (0.75 × 104), however, propelling micromotors did speed up the dissolution and dispersion process. The understanding of the combined effects of large number of micro-/nanomotors’ motion and bubbling on its macroscale mixing behavior is of significant importance for future applications of these devices.

Graphical abstract: The gating effect by thousands of bubble-propelled micromotors in macroscale channels

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Apr 2015
Accepted
30 May 2015
First published
18 Jun 2015

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 11575-11579

Author version available

The gating effect by thousands of bubble-propelled micromotors in macroscale channels

W. Z. Teo, H. Wang and M. Pumera, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 11575 DOI: 10.1039/C5NR02562A

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