Tiny robotic fighters are scouring the oceans in search of uranium as China races to secure its future nuclear fuel supplies.


  • Micromotors actively navigate water to capture uranium instead of relying on passive diffusion
  • Exposure to light significantly increases the speed and efficiency of uranium capture
  • Laboratory tests show high uranium binding capacity per gram

Chinese researchers at the Qinghai Salt Lake Institute have designed tiny robotic vacuum cleaners that propel themselves through water to capture uranium ions from vast reserves of seawater.

These sponge-like structures are approximately 2 µm in diameter, much thinner than a human hair, and rely on a metal-organic framework for their fundamental structural integrity.

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