4.6 Review

Engineered two-dimensional nanomaterials: an emerging paradigm for water purification and monitoring

Journal

MATERIALS HORIZONS
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 758-802

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0mh01358g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Texas A&M Water Seed Grant [TEES-163024]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51973155]

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The scarcity of water resources has become an increasingly complex challenge due to global population growth, economic expansion, and climate change, necessitating advanced water treatment technologies. The emergence of 2D nanomaterials offers a promising new pathway to address water treatment challenges, with the potential to improve efficiency and reduce costs.
Water scarcity has become an increasingly complex challenge with the growth of the global population, economic expansion, and climate change, highlighting the demand for advanced water treatment technologies that can provide clean water in a scalable, reliable, affordable, and sustainable manner. Recent advancements on 2D nanomaterials (2DM) open a new pathway for addressing the grand challenge of water treatment owing to their unique structures and superior properties. Emerging 2D nanostructures such as graphene, MoS2, MXene, h-BN, g-C3N4, and black phosphorus have demonstrated an unprecedented surface-to-volume ratio, which promises ultralow material use, ultrafast processing time, and ultrahigh treatment efficiency for water cleaning/monitoring. In this review, we provide a state-of-the-art account on engineered 2D nanomaterials and their applications in emerging water technologies, involving separation, adsorption, photocatalysis, and pollutant detection. The fundamental design strategies of 2DM are discussed with emphasis on their physicochemical properties, underlying mechanism and targeted applications in different scenarios. This review concludes with a perspective on the pressing challenges and emerging opportunities in 2DM-enabled wastewater treatment and water-quality monitoring. This review can help to elaborate the structure-processing-property relationship of 2DM, and aims to guide the design of next-generation 2DM systems for the development of selective, multifunctional, programmable, and even intelligent water technologies. The global significance of clean water for future generations sheds new light and much inspiration in this rising field to enhance the efficiency and affordability of water treatment and secure a global water supply in a growing portion of the world.

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