Natural evolution
has endowed diverse species with distinct geometric micro/nanostructures
exhibiting admirable functions. Examples include anisotropic microgrooves/microstripes
on the rice leaf surface for passive liquid directional rolling, and
motile microcilia widely existed in mammals’ body for active
matter transportation through in situ oscillation. Till now, bionic
studies have been extensively performed by imitating a single specific
biologic functional system. However, bionic fabrication of devices
integrating multispecies architectures is rarely reported, which may
sparkle more fascinating functionalities beyond natural findings.
Here, a cross-species design strategy is adopted by combining the
anisotropic wettability of the rice leaf surface and the directional
transportation characteristics of motile cilia. High-aspect-ratio
magnetically responsive microcolumn array (HAR-MRMA) is prepared for
active droplet transportation. It is found that just like the motile
microcilia, the unidirectional waves are formed by the real-time reconstruction
of the microcolumn array under the moving magnetic field, enabling
droplet (1–6 μL) to transport along the predetermined
anisotropic orbit. Meanwhile, on-demand droplet horizontal transportation
on the inclined plane can be realized by the rice leaf-like anisotropic
surface, showcasing active nongravity-driven droplet transportation
capability of the HAR-MRMA. The directional lossless transportation
of droplet holds great potential in the fields of microfluidics, chemical
microreaction, and intelligent droplet control system.