| Literature DB >> 31887001 |
Shuai Jiang1,2, Anke Kaltbeitzel1, Minghan Hu1, Oksana Suraeva1, Daniel Crespy2,3, Katharina Landfester1.
Abstract
One of the dreams of nanotechnology is to create tiny objects, nanobots, that are able to perform difficult tasks in dimensions and locations that are not directly accessible. One basic function of these nanobots is motility. Movements created by self-propelled micro- and nanovehicles are usually dependent on the production of propellants from catalytic reactions of fuels present in the environment. Developing self-powered nanovehicles with internally stored fuels that display motion regulated by external stimuli represents an intriguing and challenging alternative. Herein, a one-step preparation of fuel-containing nanovehicles that feature a motion that can be regulated by external stimuli is reported. Nanovehicles are prepared via a sol-gel process confined at the oil/water interface of miniemulsions. The nanovehicles display shapes ranging from mushroom-like to truncated cones and a core-shell structure so that the silica shell acts as a hull for the nanovehicles while the core is used to store the fuel. Azo-based initiators are loaded in the nanovehicles, which are activated to release nitrogen gas upon increase of temperature or exposure to UV light. Enhanced diffusion of nanovehicles is achieved upon decomposition of the fuel.Entities:
Keywords: asymmetric particles; core−shell nanoparticles; motility; nanocarriers; nanomotors
Year: 2020 PMID: 31887001 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b06408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881