The tiny fish-shaped robot removing microplastics from the sea
A tiny robot fish that can “swim” around polluted waterways picking up and removing microplastics has been developed by researchers in China. The researchers demonstrated how their 15mm swimming fish robot could repeatedly absorb nearby polystyrene microplastics and transport them elsewhere. The team, led by researchers at the Polymer Research Institute of Sichuan University in Chengdu and colleagues at Sichuan Agricultural University and Northwestern Polytechnical University in Xi’an, said their robot design was also capable of healing itself after being cut, so as to maintain its ability to adsorb microplastics. Rapidly turning a near-infrared light laser on and off at a fish’s tail caused it to flap, propelling the robot forward at a speed of 2.67 body lengths per second, faster than previously reported for other soft swimming robots and about the same speed as phytoplankton moving in water.

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