Physical Intelligence News
24 September 2020 | Stuttgart

Solar-battery effect enables a new light-driven organic microswimmer to operate in the dark

Microswimmer fishlike copyright
A microswimmer that swims through a liquid and operates much like a solar-battery. Copyright: e-conversion (Vera Hiendl)

An interdisciplinary team of scientists at the Max Planck Institutes for Intelligent Systems and Solid State Research has developed a biocompatible microswimmer made of carbon nitride, which they can propel forward through light. The particle can also store solar energy similar to miniature solar cells equipped with batteries, and can thus also swim in the dark using the stored energy. Even if the illumination is turned off, it can move forward for about half an hour with just 30 seconds of prior illumination. The photo-charging ability of this newly developed microswimmer opens up many opportunities for targeted drug delivery, environmental remediation, and other potential applications for such photo-chargeable micro- and nanomachines.