Nanoengineers used an innovative 3D printing technology to manufacture multipurpose fish-shaped microrobots - called microfish - that are chemically powered by hydrogen peroxide and magnetically controlled.
These proof-of-concept synthetic microfish will inspire a new generation of "smart" microrobots that have diverse capabilities such as detoxification, sensing and directed drug delivery, researchers said.
Researchers led by Shaochen Chen and Joseph Wang of the University of California, San Diego, were able to custom-build microfish that can do more than simply swim around when placed in a solution containing hydrogen peroxide.
"We have developed an entirely new method to engineer nature-inspired microscopic swimmers that have complex geometric structures and are smaller than the width of a human hair," said the co-first author Wei Zhu, a PhD student at the Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego.
As a proof-of-concept demonstration, the researchers incorporated toxin-neutralising nanoparticles throughout the bodies of the microfish.
The researchers mixed in polydiacetylene (PDA) nanoparticles, which capture harmful pore-forming toxins such as the ones found in bee venom.
"Another exciting possibility we could explore is to encapsulate medicines inside the microfish and use them for directed drug delivery," said co-first author Jinxing Li, PhD student at UC San Diego.
The new microfish fabrication method is based on a rapid, high-resolution 3D printing technology called microscale continuous optical printing (micro-COP).
Some of the benefits of the micro-COP technology are speed, scalability, precision and flexibility.
Within seconds, the researchers can print an array containing hundreds of microfish, each measuring 120 microns long and 30 microns thick.
The research was published in the journal Advanced Materials.
