Abstract

Light-driven micromotor has become one of the research focuses in the past decade, and its motion behavior is usually controlled by light intensity, polarization, and light wavelength. Herein, the light incident angle is utilized to control the motion behavior of silica/Au/pentacene (SiO2/Au/PEN) spherical Janus micromotor. Under tilted irradiation, a single micromotor shows positive phototactic moving behavior without the addition of external chemical fuels, which relies on the photocatalytic reactions and the self-electrophoresis mechanism. Interestingly, when the incident light is tuned to the vertical angle, the SiO2/Au/PEN micromotor stops moving. Similarly, a number of SiO2/Au/PEN micromotors exhibit the same "on-off" motion change, which is dependent on the light incident angle. More interestingly, the "on-off" motion of the SiO2/Au/PEN microparticles under vertical light irradiation results in the formation of the agglomeration with position and size precisely controlled by light. In addition, the resulting aggregation exhibits light-controlled dynamic migration behavior. The incident angle control thus opens up new opportunities for the motion control of the micromotors for diverse applications.

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