posted on 2019-05-15, 00:00authored byChunmei Zhou, Pingan Zhu, Ye Tian, Min Xu, Liqiu Wang
Micromotors
have promising potential in applications ranging from
environmental remediation to targeted drug delivery and noninvasive
microsurgery. However, there are inadequacies in the fabrication of
artificial micromotors to improve the design of structure and composition
for motion performance and multifunctionality. Here, we present a
microfluidic fiber-confined approach to creating droplet-templated
micromotors with precisely engineered anisotropies in 3D structures
and material compositions. The shape anisotropy comes from controllable
deformation in droplet templates, and material anisotropy originates
from versatile emulsion templates. Containing Pt and magnetic nanoparticles
(NPs), micromotors are endowed with both catalytic propulsion and
magnetic guidance, which are capable of performing tasks of precise
catching, skillful delivering, and on-demand releasing of cargos.
Droplet microfluidics allows us to systematically and independently
vary the shape and size of micromotors and the distribution and content
of NPs for the study of their influences on motors’ mobility
and improve the design. Our results are useful for fabricating micromotors
with well-controlled morphology and composition that is beneficial
to designing sophisticated microrobotic systems for real-world applications.