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Keywords = interfacial catalytic oxidation

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32 pages, 6305 KB  
Review
A Review of Nanomaterials in Heavy-Oil Viscosity Reduction: The Transition from Thermal Recovery to Cold Recovery
by Zhen Tao, Borui Ji, Bauyrzhan Sarsenbekuly, Wanli Kang, Hongbin Yang, Wenwei Wu, Yuqin Tian, Sarsenbek Turtabayev, Jamilyam Ismailova and Ayazhan Beisenbayeva
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(8), 452; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16080452 - 10 Apr 2026
Abstract
Heavy oil and extra-heavy oil represent mobility-limited petroleum resources because supramolecular associations of asphaltenes and resins, together with strong interfacial resistance, generate extremely high apparent viscosity. In recent years, nanotechnology has emerged as a promising approach for viscosity management and enhanced oil recovery [...] Read more.
Heavy oil and extra-heavy oil represent mobility-limited petroleum resources because supramolecular associations of asphaltenes and resins, together with strong interfacial resistance, generate extremely high apparent viscosity. In recent years, nanotechnology has emerged as a promising approach for viscosity management and enhanced oil recovery (EOR). This review critically examines recent advances in nano-assisted viscosity reduction from a reservoir-operational perspective and organizes the literature into two field-relevant categories: metal-based and non-metal nano-systems. Metal-based nanoparticles (NPs) mainly promote catalytic aquathermolysis and related bond-cleavage and hydrogen-transfer reactions under hydrothermal conditions, enabling partial upgrading and persistent viscosity reduction during thermal recovery. In contrast, non-metal nano-systems—particularly silica- and graphene-oxide-derived materials—primarily operate through interfacial and structural regulation mechanisms at low or moderate temperatures. These effects include wettability alteration, interfacial-film stabilization, modification of asphaltene aggregation behavior, and the formation of dispersed-flow regimes such as Pickering-type emulsions that reduce apparent flow resistance in multiphase systems. Beyond summarizing nanomaterial types, this review emphasizes reservoir-scale considerations governing field applicability, including brine stability, NPs transport and retention in porous media, and formulation compatibility. Comparative analysis highlights the distinct operational windows of thermal catalytic nano-systems and cold-production nano-systems, providing a reservoir-oriented framework for designing nano-assisted viscosity-reduction technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy and Catalysis)
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15 pages, 16359 KB  
Article
Two-Dimensional rGO-Supported Mo2S3 Catalysts with Tunable Electronic Structure for Efficient Electrochemical Water Splitting
by Mrunal Bhosale, Aditya A. Patil and Chan-Wook Jeon
Coatings 2026, 16(4), 445; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16040445 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 195
Abstract
The rational design of cost-effective and highly active electrocatalysts for overall water splitting remains a critical challenge for sustainable hydrogen production. Herein, we report a two-dimensional reduced graphene oxide (rGO)-supported Mo2S3 nanohybrid catalyst with a tunable electronic structure engineered through [...] Read more.
The rational design of cost-effective and highly active electrocatalysts for overall water splitting remains a critical challenge for sustainable hydrogen production. Herein, we report a two-dimensional reduced graphene oxide (rGO)-supported Mo2S3 nanohybrid catalyst with a tunable electronic structure engineered through interfacial coupling. The intimate integration of Mo2S3 nanoflakes with conductive rGO nanosheet facilitates rapid electron transport, enhanced active site exposure, and optimized adsorption energetics for reaction intermediates. Structural and spectroscopic analyses confirm strong electronic interaction between Mo2S3 and rGO, leading to modulated charge density distribution and improved intrinsic catalytic activity. Electrochemical evaluations reveal significantly reduced overpotentials for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) with 166 mV overpotential at 10 mA cm−2 current density, along with favorable Tafel kinetics with 38.1 mV dec−1 and long-term operational stability in alkaline electrolyte. The rGO-Mo2S3-2||Pt-C cell delivers 10 mA cm−2 at 1.64 V, indicating efficient alkaline water splitting. The enhanced performance is attributed to synergistic effects arising from electronic modulation, enhanced active sites, and accelerated interfacial charge transfer. Full article
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16 pages, 5617 KB  
Article
Inverse Ni/CeCrOx Catalysts for Enhanced Low-Temperature CO2 Methanation
by Da Zhang, Haiyu Qi, Bowen Lei, Xuan Guo and Feiyan Fu
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(7), 3193; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27073193 - 31 Mar 2026
Viewed by 190
Abstract
Low-temperature methanation technology offers a promising pathway for carbon recycling and sustainable energy storage by enabling near-equilibrium CO2 conversion under atmospheric pressure. However, efficiently activating CO2 at low temperatures remains a significant challenge due to the kinetic limitations of hydrogenation intermediates. [...] Read more.
Low-temperature methanation technology offers a promising pathway for carbon recycling and sustainable energy storage by enabling near-equilibrium CO2 conversion under atmospheric pressure. However, efficiently activating CO2 at low temperatures remains a significant challenge due to the kinetic limitations of hydrogenation intermediates. We construct a composite oxide–metal interface structure by anchoring highly dispersed CeCrOx nanoclusters onto metallic nickel via an ion-exchange method. This catalyst exhibits superior activity compared to conventional Ni/oxide catalysts with identical composition. Under atmospheric pressure at 220 °C, it achieves nearly 80% CO2 conversion with over 99% methane selectivity and maintains excellent catalytic performance and structural stability during a 240-h continuous test. Systematic characterizations, including high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, CO2 temperature-programmed desorption, and in situ DRIFTS reflectance infrared Fourier-transform spectroscopy, reveal that the synergistic modification by CeO2 and Cr2O3 not only optimizes the electronic structure of Ni to promote CO2 adsorption and activation, but also enhances H2 dissociation and intermediate conversion by regulating oxygen vacancy concentration and alkaline site distribution. Mechanistic studies indicate that the reaction follows a synergistic mechanism dominated by the formate pathway and assisted by the CO pathway. Moreover, the interfacial structure effectively stabilizes active sites and inhibits carbon deposition from CH4 decomposition. This study provides a universal and effective strategy for designing Ni-based CO2 conversion catalysts suited for mild reaction conditions and characterized by high energy efficiency. Full article
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37 pages, 2913 KB  
Review
Non-Precious Electrocatalysts for Alkaline Oxygen Evolution: Transition Metal Compounds, Carbon Supports, and Metal-Free Systems
by Kristina Radinović, Aleksandar Mijajlović, Dušan Mladenović, David Tomić, Ana Nastasić, Dalibor Stanković and Jadranka Milikić
Processes 2026, 14(7), 1085; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14071085 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 511
Abstract
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER), a key half-reaction in electrochemical water splitting, is limited by sluggish multi-electron transfer kinetics, starting extensive research into efficient, low-cost nanoscale electrocatalysts, particularly those based on nickel, cobalt, and iron, as well as mixed-metal, hybrid, and heteroatom-doped carbon-based [...] Read more.
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER), a key half-reaction in electrochemical water splitting, is limited by sluggish multi-electron transfer kinetics, starting extensive research into efficient, low-cost nanoscale electrocatalysts, particularly those based on nickel, cobalt, and iron, as well as mixed-metal, hybrid, and heteroatom-doped carbon-based metal-free systems, as presented here. Ni- and Co-based electrocatalysts show high efficiency for alkaline OER due to optimized nanostructures, surface modifications, heterostructure design, and multi-metal doping, which enhance activity, stability, and electronic properties. Their performance relies on precise atomic-level control of structure and synergistic interactions, enabling them to approach or rival noble-metal catalysts. Iron-based electrocatalysts are also promising due to their abundance, low cost, and flexible redox chemistry, forming active iron oxyhydroxide species during operation; however, their low conductivity requires structural and electronic optimization. Beyond Fe, Ni, and Co, copper-based compounds, zeolitic imidazolate framework-derived structures, and manganese phosphide–cerium oxide composites offer enhanced oxygen vacancies, tunable structures, and strong interfacial synergy. Furthermore, heteroatom-doped carbon materials incorporating nitrogen, phosphorus, or sulfur improve catalytic activity by modifying electronic structure, creating active sites, and enhancing charge transfer. Overall, careful control of composition, structure, and electronic properties enables the development of efficient, durable, and scalable noble-metal-free catalysts for OER. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Review Papers in Section "Chemical Processes and Systems")
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18 pages, 1675 KB  
Review
Room-Temperature Air-Only Catalytic Oxidation of Indoor Volatile Organic Compounds: Mechanistic Insights and Emerging Catalysts
by Dan Zhao, Lisheng Zhang, Yibing Chen, Yongqiang Wang and Hui Ding
Molecules 2026, 31(6), 1029; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31061029 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 430
Abstract
Driven by global urbanization and increasing emphasis on sustainable building practices, indoor volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have emerged as a major environmental and health challenge. This review specifically focuses on room-temperature air-only catalytic oxidation of representative indoor VOCs under a recently matured and [...] Read more.
Driven by global urbanization and increasing emphasis on sustainable building practices, indoor volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have emerged as a major environmental and health challenge. This review specifically focuses on room-temperature air-only catalytic oxidation of representative indoor VOCs under a recently matured and highly application-relevant research direction. Recent advances are systematically summarized, highlighting catalyst design strategies, air-phase reaction mechanisms, and performance of noble metal catalysts (NMCs), transition metal oxides (TMOs), bimetallic synergistic catalysts (BSCs), and single-atom catalysts (SACs). Emphasis is placed on thermodynamic feasibility, reaction kinetics, oxidation behavior of non-formaldehyde VOCs, and mechanistic insights associated with SACs interfacial synergy, which enable efficient O2 activation, high selectivity, and operational stability without external oxidants even under high VOC concentrations. This review provides theoretical foundations and technical guidance for VOCs mitigation and supports the advancement of green, low-carbon, and safe indoor air purification strategies worldwide. Full article
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20 pages, 3075 KB  
Article
Study on the Desulfurization Performance of a Flexible Polyionic Liquid Membrane Derived from Polyacrylonitrile
by Yue Gao, Xuan Qi, Hao Yan, Danfeng He and Junfeng Zhang
Catalysts 2026, 16(3), 261; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16030261 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 392
Abstract
A flexible polyionic liquid (PIL) nanofiber membrane-supported phosphomolybdic acid catalyst (PM-PIL) was fabricated via stepwise chemical transformation of polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofiber membranes. The nitrile groups of PAN were converted into pyridine units, followed by quaternization and anion exchange with phosphomolybdic acid (PMo), resulting [...] Read more.
A flexible polyionic liquid (PIL) nanofiber membrane-supported phosphomolybdic acid catalyst (PM-PIL) was fabricated via stepwise chemical transformation of polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofiber membranes. The nitrile groups of PAN were converted into pyridine units, followed by quaternization and anion exchange with phosphomolybdic acid (PMo), resulting in a polyionic liquid membrane with uniformly immobilized PMo species. Benefiting from its nanofibrous architecture and ionic liquid characteristics, the PM-PIL membrane simultaneously acts as a heterogeneous catalyst and a Pickering emulsion stabilizer, enabling efficient interfacial catalytic oxidation desulfurization. The PM-PIL membrane exhibited excellent catalytic performance toward dibenzothiophene (DBT) oxidation in an H2O2-based model oil system. Under optimized conditions (60 °C, O/S = 150:1), more than 90% DBT removal was achieved within 90 min, and complete desulfurization was obtained within 2 h. Compared with phosphomolybdic acid and poly(pyridine), the PM-PIL membrane showed markedly enhanced activity and stability, maintaining over 90% efficiency after six cycles. Product analysis confirmed selective oxidation of DBT to dibenzothiophene sulfone. This work provides a robust and recyclable membrane-based catalytic platform for efficient oxidative desulfurization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Catalysis for Sustainable Energy)
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20 pages, 4880 KB  
Article
Melamine-Functionalized Graphene Oxide as a Multifunctional Modifier for High-Performance Epoxy Nanocomposites with Enhanced Mechanical Properties and Thermal Stability
by Anton Mostovoy, Andrey Shcherbakov, Amirbek Bekeshev, Sergey Brudnik, Andrey Yakovlev, Arai Zhumabekova, Elena Yakovleva, Sholpan Ussenkulova, Oleg Rastegaev and Marina Lopukhova
Polymers 2026, 18(5), 657; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18050657 - 7 Mar 2026
Viewed by 540
Abstract
Developing polymer composites with improved mechanical and thermal properties requires strategies to overcome the problem of agglomeration and weak interfacial interactions of carbon nanofillers. This paper presents an effective strategy for the covalent functionalization of graphene oxide (GO) with melamine to create high-performance [...] Read more.
Developing polymer composites with improved mechanical and thermal properties requires strategies to overcome the problem of agglomeration and weak interfacial interactions of carbon nanofillers. This paper presents an effective strategy for the covalent functionalization of graphene oxide (GO) with melamine to create high-performance epoxy nanocomposites. The functionalization results in the formation of nitrogen-containing heterocyclic structures on the GO surface, as confirmed by FTIR and Raman spectroscopy. The addition of the obtained modified filler (mel-GO) into the epoxy matrix provides a synergistic effect: the melamine amino groups catalytically accelerate curing, reducing the gelation time from 146 to 48 min and increasing the maximum self-heating temperature from 94 to 122 °C, thus indicating enhanced interfacial interaction. This interaction results in a remarkable overall improvement in mechanical properties: tensile and flexural strengths increase by more than 20%, and elastic moduli by 31% and 58%, respectively, compared to the composite containing unmodified GO. At the same time, impact strength (from 14 to 23 kJ/m2) and hardness (up to 87 Shore D) increase. A key achievement is a dramatic increase in thermal and thermal-oxidative stability: the onset temperature of decomposition (T5%) increases by 27 °C, the half-decomposition temperature (T50%) by 45 °C, and the thermal stability index (THRI) increases from 119.3 to 128.9 °C. A more than twofold increase in coke residue yield (to 9.29%) and an increase in the Vicat softening point to 175 °C confirm the formation of an effective thermally stabilizing barrier layer due to the combined action of nitrogen-containing groups and dispersed graphene flakes. The proposed approach to functionalizing graphene oxide with melamine opens the way for the creation of next-generation epoxy composites with a record-breaking combination of strength, impact toughness, and thermal stability for applications in aerospace, electronics, and composite structures operating under extreme conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Epoxy Polymers and Composites, Second Edition)
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15 pages, 9608 KB  
Article
Single-Atom Mn Anchored on Carbon-Modified C3N5 for Efficient Catalytic Ozonation of Organic Pollutants
by Gaochao Song, Zhou Yang, Jiangzixi Guo, Yang Yang and Yidong Hou
Catalysts 2026, 16(3), 247; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16030247 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 601
Abstract
Catalytic ozonation often suffers from a low ozone utilization rate and incomplete mineralization of organic pollutants. To address these challenges, we designed and prepared a novel catalyst via a one-step thermal polymerization method, anchoring single-atom manganese on a glucose-derived carbon network-modified C3 [...] Read more.
Catalytic ozonation often suffers from a low ozone utilization rate and incomplete mineralization of organic pollutants. To address these challenges, we designed and prepared a novel catalyst via a one-step thermal polymerization method, anchoring single-atom manganese on a glucose-derived carbon network-modified C3N5 framework (Mn/C-C3N5). Aberration-corrected high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy (AC-HAADF-STEM) on an FEI Titan Themis Z microscope confirmed the atomic dispersion of Mn sites, while Raman spectroscopy using a Renishaw inVia Reflex laser micro-Raman spectrometer verified the successful incorporation of a graphitic carbon network within the C3N5 matrix. Moreover, electrochemical analyses, including electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and cyclic voltammetry (CV) performed on a Bio-Logic SP-150 electrochemical workstation, demonstrated that the integration of the conductive carbon matrix substantially enhanced the interfacial charge transfer capability. The optimized Mn/C-C3N5 catalyst demonstrated exceptional performance in phenol mineralization, achieving a 97% total organic carbon (TOC) removal within 60 min, a remarkable improvement compared to pristine C3N5 (30%). Furthermore, the catalyst exhibited excellent operational stability, preserving more than 95% of its original activity over five repeated runs. Mechanistic investigations, including electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and radical quenching experiments, revealed that the Mn/C-C3N5 system accelerated the generation of multiple oxidizing radicals (•O2, 1O2, and •OH), with •OH identified as the predominant reactive species responsible for complete mineralization. This work establishes an integrated catalytic platform and provides fundamental insights into electronic structure modulation for designing advanced oxidation catalysts. Full article
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23 pages, 1493 KB  
Review
Research Progress and Prospects of Modified Biochar in the Adsorption and Degradation of Sulfonamide Antibiotics
by Junjie Wang, Yingxia Hou, Xue Li, Ran Zhao, Xiaoquan Mu, Yifan Liu, Chengcheng Huang, Frank Fu and Fengxia Yang
Antibiotics 2026, 15(3), 268; https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics15030268 - 4 Mar 2026
Viewed by 708
Abstract
Sulfonamide antibiotics (SAs) are ubiquitous and persistent organic contaminants in aquatic and soil ecosystems due to their extensive application and high structural stability, causing rising environmental hazards. Conventional treatment approaches, generally based on physical adsorption or biological processes, remain limited in achieving efficient [...] Read more.
Sulfonamide antibiotics (SAs) are ubiquitous and persistent organic contaminants in aquatic and soil ecosystems due to their extensive application and high structural stability, causing rising environmental hazards. Conventional treatment approaches, generally based on physical adsorption or biological processes, remain limited in achieving efficient and stable removal as well as deep molecular modification of SAs. In recent years, modified biochar has developed as a flexible environmental functional material incorporating adsorption and reaction regulation capabilities, owing to its customizable pore structure, surface chemistry, and electronic characteristics. This study comprehensively highlights current achievements in the adsorption and degradation of sulfonamide antibiotics by modified biochar, with specific emphasis on modification techniques, structural modulation, structure–performance connections, and interfacial reaction processes. Through physical activation, heteroatom doping, defect engineering, and metal integration, biochar has developed from a traditional adsorbent into a carbon-based interfacial reactor capable of pollutant adsorption, molecular activation, and directed transformation. Surface-confined reaction interfaces, where π–π interactions, hydrogen bonding, electrostatic interactions, and metal coordination cooperatively control adsorption and transformation processes, are primarily responsible for the elimination of SAs. Moreover, the dual functions of modified biochar in driving both radical and non-radical pathways are explored, showing the vital importance of interfacial electronic structure modulation and electron-transfer mechanisms in influencing reaction efficiency and selectivity. The impact of sulfonamide molecular configurations, ambient circumstances, and concomitant chemicals on removal performance are also explored. Unlike previous reviews that mainly summarize adsorption efficiency or oxidant activation systems separately, this work integrates structural modulation, interfacial electronic regulation, and bond-selective transformation mechanisms into a unified structure–chemistry–reactivity framework. By correlating sulfonamide molecular configuration with biochar electronic structure, this review provides a mechanistic roadmap for the rational design of next-generation catalytic biochar systems. Finally, key challenges related to structural controllability, long-term stability, and engineering scalability are identified, and future research directions are proposed to support the rational design of high-performance biochar materials and the practical control of sulfonamide antibiotic pollution. Full article
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12 pages, 2797 KB  
Article
Facile Fabrication of Carbon Paper-Supported Fe Catalyst Under Pulse Laser Irradiation for Degradation of Rhodamine B
by Wenhao Bai, Fei Chang, Xiaohan Fan and Wei Tian
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(5), 314; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16050314 - 28 Feb 2026
Viewed by 532
Abstract
Persistent organic pollutants, such as Rhodamine B (RhB), pose significant environmental and health risks, necessitating the development of advanced oxidation technologies for effective removal. While heterogeneous photo-Fenton catalysts are known for their high degradation efficiency, their practical application is often limited by complex [...] Read more.
Persistent organic pollutants, such as Rhodamine B (RhB), pose significant environmental and health risks, necessitating the development of advanced oxidation technologies for effective removal. While heterogeneous photo-Fenton catalysts are known for their high degradation efficiency, their practical application is often limited by complex synthesis processes, catalyst detachment, and difficult recovery. This study proposes an innovative laser-induced, one-step synthesis strategy to fabricate metal/carbon nanocomposite catalytic layers directly onto flexible carbon paper. The as-prepared composites exhibit strong interfacial interaction between metal nanoparticles and the carbon matrix, as indicated by XPS analysis, and demonstrate enhanced catalytic activity in the UV/H2O2 system. Notably, the integrated composites exhibit exceptional catalytic activity in the UV/H2O2 system, achieving complete degradation of a 20 mg/L RhB solution within just 1.5 h. The enhanced performance is attributed to the facilitated Fe3+/Fe2+ cycling and efficient generation of hydroxyl radicals (·OH), although the underlying charge separation mechanism requires further investigation with techniques such as photoluminescence spectroscopy and transient photocurrent measurements. This work not only demonstrates the high activity and stability of the photo-Fenton catalyst but also provides a green, rapid fabrication approach for the development of efficient and integrable catalytic devices for wastewater treatment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Manufacturing of Nanomaterials)
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20 pages, 2843 KB  
Article
Nanocatalytic Enhancement of Local Heat Transfer in Continuous-Flow Thermal Reactors
by Nasser Zouli, Nujud Maslamani, Ayman Yousef and Muthanna Al-Dahhan
Catalysts 2026, 16(2), 194; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16020194 - 19 Feb 2026
Viewed by 590
Abstract
An experimental investigation was conducted to evaluate the thermal conductivity (TC) and local heat-transfer coefficients (LHTCs) of nanofluids containing alumina (Al2O3), hematite (Fe2O3), and copper oxide (CuO) nanoparticles dispersed in deionized water. A newly developed [...] Read more.
An experimental investigation was conducted to evaluate the thermal conductivity (TC) and local heat-transfer coefficients (LHTCs) of nanofluids containing alumina (Al2O3), hematite (Fe2O3), and copper oxide (CuO) nanoparticles dispersed in deionized water. A newly developed non-invasive LHTC probe was integrated into the inner wall of the test section to enable direct quantification of interfacial heat-transfer performance. The measurements were conducted under laminar and turbulent flow conditons across Reynolds numbers ranging from 1000 to 10,000. The selected nanoparticles were chosen based on their high intrinsic thermal conductivity, cost effectiveness, and, in the case of Fe2O3, magnetic recoverability. The nanoparticles enhanced both TC and LHTCs through improved thermophysical propoerties and possible interfacial effects. Maximum TC enhancements of 19%, 21%, and 25% were achieved for Al2O3/distilled water (DW), Fe2O3/DW, and CuO/DW nanofluids, respectively, at 0.05 vol% and 55 °C, while the corresponding LHTC enhancements reached 44%, 50%, and 53%. Under turbulent flow, CuO/DW exhibited the highest heat-transfer performance, attributed to a 25% increase in TC and corresponding improvement in connective heat transfer. Since the boundary-layer thickness exceeded the nanoparticle diameter (30 nm), nanoparticles penetrated the interfacial film, inducing localized micro-convection and catalytic micro-mixing, which intensified interfacial heat transport. The experimentally determined Nusselt numbers showed strong agreement with the Xuan–Qiang correlation at 55 °C, suggesting that the nanoparticle volume fraction governs the catalytic interfacial heat-transfer mechanism. Full article
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25 pages, 1046 KB  
Review
Green Approaches to the Surface Modification of Cellulose: Methods and Mechanisms
by M. Madhushree, G. T. Mahesha, H. Venkatachalam and K. Subrahmanya Bhat
J. Compos. Sci. 2026, 10(2), 99; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs10020099 - 13 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1213
Abstract
Cellulose, as the most abundant renewable biopolymer on Earth, provides significant potential for sustainable material development. However, its native hydrophilicity, crystallinity, and poor compatibility with nonpolar systems limit its use in advanced applications. To overcome these challenges, a broad spectrum of organic reactions [...] Read more.
Cellulose, as the most abundant renewable biopolymer on Earth, provides significant potential for sustainable material development. However, its native hydrophilicity, crystallinity, and poor compatibility with nonpolar systems limit its use in advanced applications. To overcome these challenges, a broad spectrum of organic reactions has been employed to chemically modify cellulose, enabling fine-tuning of its surface chemistry, solubility, thermal stability, and interfacial behavior. This review highlights key modification strategies, including esterification, etherification, click chemistry, and isocyanate-based urethanization, as well as oxidation methods that introduce reactive functionalities for further coupling. The discussion includes both dispersion-based (heterogeneous) and solution-based (homogeneous) reaction systems, emphasizing the influence of reaction conditions, solvent selection, and catalytic approaches. These organic transformation routes allow the integration of cellulose into a wide range of functional materials such as biodegradable plastics, hydrophobic coatings, biomedical scaffolds, flame-retardant composites, and flexible electronics, thereby positioning chemically modified cellulose as a versatile platform for next-generation sustainable technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biocomposites)
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18 pages, 3864 KB  
Article
Tuning the Hydrogen Evolution Activity of Co2NiO4 via Precursor-Controlled Synthesis
by Abu Talha Aqueel Ahmed, Momin M. Mujtaba, Kafeel Ahmed Tufail Ahmed, Abu Saad Ansari, Sangeun Cho, Youngmin Lee, Sejoon Lee and Sankar Sekar
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(3), 1584; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27031584 - 5 Feb 2026
Viewed by 492
Abstract
The realization of efficient and durable earth-abundant electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is critical for scalable hydrogen production, yet remains limited by insufficient intrinsic activity. Herein, we demonstrate a precursor-controlled hydrothermal strategy that enables precise morphology and surface-state regulation of spinel [...] Read more.
The realization of efficient and durable earth-abundant electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is critical for scalable hydrogen production, yet remains limited by insufficient intrinsic activity. Herein, we demonstrate a precursor-controlled hydrothermal strategy that enables precise morphology and surface-state regulation of spinel Co2NiO4 directly grown on nickel foam, allowing a clear correlation between catalyst architecture and HER performance. By replacing urea with hexamethylenetetramine, an ultrathin, highly interconnected two-dimensional nanosheet network (CNO-HT) is obtained, which promotes efficient electron transport, rapid electrolyte penetration, and maximized exposure of catalytically active sites. Structural and spectroscopic analyses confirm the formation of phase-pure cubic Co2NiO4 with enriched mixed-valence Ni and Co species, favoring enhanced redox activity. The CNO-HT catalyst exhibits a low overpotential (86 mV at 10 mA cm−2) and a smaller Tafel slope (103 mV dec−1), significantly outperforming the urea-derived counterpart. Importantly, the catalyst maintains stable HER operation for 96 h at both 10 and 100 mA cm−2, with post-stability electrochemical analyses confirming preserved kinetics and interfacial properties. This work establishes precursor-regulated nanosheet engineering as general and scalable strategy to unlock the intrinsic catalytic potential of spinel metal oxides, offering actionable design principles for next-generation non-noble electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Materials for Water Splitting)
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32 pages, 3869 KB  
Review
Electron Traps in Thermal Heterogeneous Catalysis: Fundamentals, Detection, and Applications of CO2 Hydrogenation
by Arati Prakash Tibe, Tathagata Bhattacharjya, Ales Panacek, Robert Prucek and Libor Kvitek
Catalysts 2026, 16(2), 156; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16020156 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1012
Abstract
The field of developing effective catalysts for heterogeneous catalysis has recently focused on controlling the structures of catalysts themselves to optimise the density and energy of crystal lattice defects. This can significantly influence catalytic activity in terms of both reaction rates and reaction [...] Read more.
The field of developing effective catalysts for heterogeneous catalysis has recently focused on controlling the structures of catalysts themselves to optimise the density and energy of crystal lattice defects. This can significantly influence catalytic activity in terms of both reaction rates and reaction mechanisms, and thus the selective production of desired substances as well. In many cases, these crystal lattice defects manifest themselves as so-called electron traps (ETs) and thus significantly influence charge transfer between the catalyst and reactants. ETs provide the missing electronic link between atomic-scale defects and macroscopic performance in heterogeneous catalysis. Therefore, the importance of ETs for catalysis is particularly evident in areas where charge transfer plays a fundamental role in the reaction mechanism, such as photocatalysis and electrocatalysis. In the field of thermally initiated reactions, the importance of ETs in heterogeneous catalysis has not yet been fully appreciated. However, several studies have already addressed the importance of ETs for this type of reaction. This review consolidates and extends the concept of ETs to purely thermal-initiated reactions, with a focus on CO2 hydrogenation using typical transition metal catalysts. Firstly, in this review, ETs are defined as band gap states associated with internal and external defects, and their depth, density, spatial location, and dynamics are then coupled with key steps in thermocatalytic cycles, including charge storage/release, reactant activation, intermediate stabilisation, and redox turnover. Secondly, electron trap detection is reviewed based on advanced spectroscopic techniques, including reversed double-beam photoacoustic spectroscopy (RDB-PAS), thermally stimulated current (TSC), deep-level transient spectroscopy (DLTS), thermoluminescence (TL), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and photoluminescence (PL), highlighting how each method describes trap energetics and populations under realistic operating conditions. Finally, case studies on the application of metal oxides and supported metals are discussed, as these are typical catalysts for the reaction mentioned above. This review highlights how oxygen vacancies (OVs), polarons, and metal–support interfacial sites act as robust electron reservoirs, lowering the barriers for CO2 activation and hydrogenation. By reframing thermocatalysts through the lens of ET chemistry, this review identifies ETs as actionable targets for the rational design of next-generation materials for CO2 hydrogenation and related high-temperature transformations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Catalysts for CO2 Conversions)
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24 pages, 3517 KB  
Review
Recent Advances in Anion-Doping Transition Metal Layered Double Hydroxide for Water Oxidation to Hydrogen Evolution
by Yang Zhu, Luyu Liu, Linlin Xu, Tingjun Ji, Xiang Ding, Haotian Qin, Siyuan Tang and Fuzhan Song
Catalysts 2026, 16(2), 141; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16020141 - 2 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 757
Abstract
Electrochemical water splitting for hydrogen production is limited by the slow kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). The tunable structure and anion-exchange capability of layered double hydroxides (LDHs) underpin their promise as OER catalysts. Consequently, the strategic incorporation of foreign anions is [...] Read more.
Electrochemical water splitting for hydrogen production is limited by the slow kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). The tunable structure and anion-exchange capability of layered double hydroxides (LDHs) underpin their promise as OER catalysts. Consequently, the strategic incorporation of foreign anions is viewed as a powerful approach to engineer their active sites and boost catalytic activity. This review summarizes how doping with anions such as NO3, PO43−, Cl, F, and Sq2− modifies the electronic structure of LDHs. These anions regulate the local coordination environment, induce oxygen vacancies, and alter metal oxidation states, thereby synergistically optimizing both the adsorption–evolution mechanism (AEM) and the lattice oxygen oxidation mechanism (LOM). For instance, NO3 promotes surface reconstruction, F activates lattice oxygen, PO43− stabilizes the interface, Cl reshapes reaction pathways, and Sq2− maintains interfacial alkalinity. Collectively, rational anion engineering lowers the overpotential, increases current density, and improves stability, establishing an effective design framework for advanced LDH-based OER electrocatalysts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cutting-Edge Catalysts for Water Splitting and Hydrogen Production)
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