Photocatalytic materials are gaining popularity and research investment for developing light-driven micromotors. While most of the early work used highly stable TiO2 as a material to construct micromotors, mostly in combination with noble metals, other semiconductors offer a wider range of properties, including independence from high-energy UV light. This review focuses on our work with BiVO4 which has shown promise due to its small band gap and resulting ability to absorb blue light. Additionally, this salt’s well-defined crystal structures lead to exploitable charge separation on different crystal facets, providing sufficient asymmetry to cause active propulsion. These properties have given rise to fascinating physical and chemical behaviors that show how rich and variable active matter can become. Here, we present the synthesis of different BiVO4 microparticles and their material properties that make them excellent candidates as active micromotors. A critical factor in understanding inherently asymmetric micromotors is knowledge of their flow fields. However, due to their small size and the need to use even smaller tracer particles to avoid perturbing the flow field, measuring flow fields at the microscale is a difficult task. We also present these first results, which allow us to demonstrate the correlation between chemical reactivity and the flow generated, leading to active motion. Due to the nontoxic nature of BiVO4, these visible-light-responsive microswimmers have been used to study the first steps toward applications, even in sensitive areas such as food technology. Although these initial tests are far from being realized, we have to face the fact that a single microswimmer will not be able to perform macroscale tasks. Therefore, we present the reader with the first simple studies of collective motion, hoping for many new contributions to the field. The one-step synthesis of BiVO4 clearly paves the way for studies requiring large numbers of particles. We predict that the combination of promising applications for a nontoxic material which is readily synthesized in large quantities will contribute pivotally to advance the field of active matter beyond the proof-of-concept stage.
An Account on BiVO4 as Photocatalytic Active Matter
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Acc. Mater. Res. 2024, DOI: 10.1021/accountsmr.3c00021.