Self-Propelled Nanomotors Autonomously Seek and Repair
Cracks
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Abstract
Biological
self-healing involves the autonomous localization of healing agents
at the site of damage. Herein, we design and characterize a synthetic
repair system where self-propelled nanomotors autonomously seek and
localize at microscopic cracks and thus mimic salient features of
biological wound healing. We demonstrate that these chemically powered
catalytic nanomotors, composed of conductive Au/Pt spherical Janus
particles, can autonomously detect and repair microscopic mechanical
defects to restore the electrical conductivity of broken electronic
pathways. This repair mechanism capitalizes on energetic wells and
obstacles formed by surface cracks, which dramatically alter the nanomotor
dynamics and trigger their localization at the defects. By developing
models for self-propelled Janus nanomotors on a cracked surface, we
simulate the systems’ dynamics over a range of particle speeds
and densities to verify the process by which the nanomotors autonomously
localize and accumulate at the cracks. We take advantage of this localization
to demonstrate that the nanomotors can form conductive “patches”
to repair scratched electrodes and restore the conductive pathway.
Such a nanomotor-based repair system represents an important step
toward the realization of biomimetic nanosystems that can autonomously
sense and respond to environmental changes, a development that potentially
can be expanded to a wide range of applications, from self-healing
electronics to targeted drug delivery