Tiny silver-coated microrobots can swim upward under ultraviolet light and break down antibiotic pollution in water, a study in Small reports.
Study: Silver-enhanced Photoresponsive g-C 3 N4 /Ag Janus Microrobots With Negative Photogravitaxis Efficient Antibiotic Degradation. Image Credit: Olga Maksimava/Shutterstock.com
The researchers say the photoresponsive g-C3N4/Ag Janus microrobots removed 88 % of tetracycline in 90 minutes under laboratory conditions, and still achieved 82 % degradation in real wastewater.
The work points to a new way of combining photocatalysis with active motion to improve water treatment.
Saving this for later? Download a PDF here.
Removing antibiotic residues from water is an increasingly important environmental challenge. These pollutants can persist in aquatic systems and contribute to wider ecological and public health concerns.
Photocatalytic microrobots have drawn interest because they can do two jobs at once: they move through liquid on their own and generate reactive oxygen species, or ROS, that can break down contaminants.
That combination can improve the efficiency with which pollutants are reached and degraded.
Graphitic carbon nitride, known as g-C3N4, is a promising photocatalytic material because it is low-cost, chemically stable, biocompatible, and has a tunable bandgap. Despite those advantages, it has seen limited use in microrobotic systems.
In the new study, the researchers paired g-C3N4 with silver, a cheaper alternative to more expensive noble metals such as platinum and gold. Silver can form a Schottky barrier with g-C3N4, helping trap electrons, reduce charge recombination, and improve photocatalytic performance.
The Microrobots
The researchers first produced g-C3N4 microtubes using a hydrothermal process followed by calcination. They then deposited the microtubes onto glass and sputtered a 15 nm silver layer onto one side, creating a Janus structure with an asymmetric metallic coating.
Microscopy confirmed the design. SEM and STEM images showed tubular microstructures decorated with silver nanoparticles about 6 nm in size. EDX and XPS verified the Janus architecture and confirmed that the silver remained in its metallic state, while XRD showed the expected crystalline features of both g-C3N4 and Ag.
The team also used UV/Vis diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, and photocurrent measurements to examine light absorption and charge-transfer behaviour.
These tests showed that the silver-modified system handled photogenerated charge more effectively than pure g-C3N4.
What The Study Found
Under 365 nm UV light, the microrobots displayed negative photogravitaxis – upward motion against gravity. The researchers linked that motion to self-diffusiophoretic propulsion, driven by the uneven distribution of reactive species generated around the particles during illumination.
For the degradation tests, tetracycline was used as the model pollutant. The reaction was carried out in the presence of 0.2 wt.% hydrogen peroxide, which acted as part of the reaction medium rather than as the contaminant itself.
The microrobots removed about 88 % of tetracycline within 90 minutes. When the researchers removed either the light, the hydrogen peroxide, or the microrobots themselves, performance dropped.
Control experiments added an important layer of context. A non-Janus g-C3N4/Ag composite achieved 77 % degradation, and slow stirring also raised degradation to 77 %. That suggests the main driver is still photocatalysis, while the microrobots’ motion provides an added mass-transfer benefit by improving contact with pollutants.
What Drives The Chemistry
To understand the reaction mechanism, the researchers used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to detect reactive oxygen species. They identified superoxide radicals (·O2−), hydroxyl radicals (·OH), and singlet oxygen (1O2) under UV irradiation in the presence of H2O2 and the g-C3N4/Ag microrobots.
Scavenger experiments showed that superoxide radicals were the dominant species involved in tetracycline degradation. Singlet oxygen was also involved, while hydroxyl radicals and photogenerated holes were not the primary contributors.
This distinction helps explain why the silver-enhanced design performs better: the metal improves charge separation, which in turn supports more effective ROS generation.
What Happened To The Antibiotic
Using HPLC-MS, the researchers identified degradation intermediates consistent with oxidation, dehydration, and hydroxylation. Rather than pointing to a single breakdown route, the data suggest multiple parallel transformation pathways.
The team also tested the microrobots in real wastewater, where performance remained relatively strong at 82% degradation. Measurements of dissolved Ag+ indicated that the process did not trigger additional silver leaching under the reported test conditions.
Cleaning Up Polluted Water
The study presents a compact but technically detailed example of how photocatalysis and microrobot motion can work together in environmental cleanup.
At the nanoscale, silver improves charge separation and helps reduce recombination. At the microscale, light-driven movement improves mass transfer and contact with contaminants. Together, those effects make the system more effective than photocatalysis alone.
The results are still tied to controlled UV-driven experiments, but they suggest a useful route for future water-treatment systems designed to remove antibiotic residues and other persistent pollutants.
Journal Reference
Y. Yuan, et al. (2026). Silver-enhanced Photoresponsive g-C3N4/Ag Janus Microrobots With Negative Photogravitaxis Efficient Antibiotic Degradation. Small. DOI: 10.1002/smll.202512272