Have you convinced your boss yet? Groups get the best deals 🎟️ Buy now before price increase →

This article was published on June 10, 2021

Yo, plastic soup! These tiny swimming bots are coming to destroy you

The microbots are on the hunt


Yo, plastic soup! These tiny swimming bots are coming to destroy you Image by: GBarbarov/neekoh.fi — Edited

Microplastics are everywhere, from the Mediterranean seafloor to Mount Everest, and the tiny fragments of litter can take hundreds of years to degrade. They can also absorb heavy metals and pollutants that could harm humans or animals that inadvertently consume them.

At less than 5mm in length, the polymers are hard to remove manually. But there may be a more efficient method of eliminating the plastic scourge: attacking them with bacteria-sized robots.

Scientists at the University of Chemistry and Technology in Prague recently developed self-propelled microrobots that can swim onto microplastics and break them down.

The tiny bots — about the size of a red blood cell — use solar power to move through water and dismantle microplastics that they find.

The <3 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

[Read: Why entrepreneurship in emerging markets matters]

In a proof-of-concept study, the microbots successfully swam down a maze of channels to efficiently degrade a range of synthetic microplastics:

Overall, this proof-of-concept study using microrobots with hybrid wireless powers has shown for the first time the possibility of efficient degradation of ultrasmall plastic particles in confined complex spaces, which can impact research on microplastic treatments, with the final goal of diminishing microplastics as an emergent threat for humans and marine ecosystems.

Metallic microbots (dark blue dots) colonize a jagged piece of microplastic.
Credit: Adapted from ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
The microrobots (dark blue dots) use visible light to break down microplastic into smaller molecules.

The team still needs to further investigate the potential capabilities and environmental impacts of the bots. But they believe that their research could lay the foundations for a new way of degrading microplastics.

Greetings Humanoids! Did you know we have a newsletter all about AI? You can subscribe to it right here.

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with