- Micromotors actively navigate water to capture uranium rather than relying on passive diffusion
- Exposure to light significantly increases the speed and efficiency of uranium capture
- Laboratory tests show high uranium binding capacity per gram
Chinese researchers at the Qinghai Salt Lakes Institute have designed tiny robotic vacuum cleaners that propel themselves through water to capture uranium ions from vast reserves of seawater.
These sponge-like structures measure about 2 µm across, much thinner than a human hair, and depend on an organometallic framework for their core structural integrity.
The internal chemical composition of these devices ensures that they remain stable in various aquatic environments for extended periods while maintaining operational effectiveness.
Little robots that chase instead of wait
When activated with hydrogen peroxide, the particles generate enough force to move at approximately 7 µm per second through the surrounding liquid medium.
Light exposure nearly doubles that rate, providing a solar-like enhancement that increases overall collection speed and efficiency during critical extraction phases.
Laboratory tests revealed its ability to bind up to 406 mg of uranium per gram of material.
Unlike fixed adsorbents that wait for contaminants to approach by chance, these micromotors actively search for specific targets in large aquatic spaces.
This self-directed approach promises lower energy demands and reduced ecological footprints compared to traditional stationary materials used by various industrial sectors.
Controlled experiments revealed dynamics that reflect biological predator-prey relationships.
When active micromotors encountered passive colloidal particles, the interactions produced patterns resembling hunting, escape responses, and the coordinated movement of swarms.
These behaviors changed markedly in response to changes in fuel concentration, suggesting that the machines follow operating rules similar to those governing living microorganisms.
Strategic pressures and the long road ahead
The oceans are estimated to contain 4.5 billion tons of uranium, an amount so enormous that it could theoretically fuel civilization for millennia.
The problem lies in concentration, because the metal exists at levels too dilute for cost-effective recovery using standard methods.
China is in a bind here as it builds more nuclear reactors while also relying heavily on imported fuel.
This double pressure makes unconventional sources like seawater seem less like a scientific curiosity and more like a strategic necessity.
However, micromotors cannot function properly in high salinity environments, which for now rules out their direct use in salt lakes and many marine environments.
The research team cautioned that the technology is still in its infancy and faces significant scale hurdles before any practical implementation.
It takes years of sustained engineering work to overcome the harsh chemical conditions found in real aquatic environments.
The underlying concept of machines actively hunting pollutants opens a door that passive materials could never open, but the gap between a lab breakthrough and ocean-ready hardware remains wide.
Through SCMP
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