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Advances in Matrix-Supported Palladium Nanocatalysts for Water Treatment

期刊

NANOMATERIALS
卷 12, 期 20, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano12203593

关键词

palladium nanocatalyst; hybrid catalyst-support systems; water purification

资金

  1. National Science Foundation (CBET) [1747826]
  2. University of Maine
  3. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  4. Directorate For Engineering [1747826] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Advanced catalysts play a crucial role in various applications. Nanocatalysts, with their high activity and size-dependent properties, have shown great potential. However, concerns about toxicity, material retrieval, and safety limit their practical use. To overcome this limitation, researchers propose the integration of nanocatalysts with matrix-supported hybrid nanostructures for stability and durability.
Advanced catalysts are crucial for a wide range of chemical, pharmaceutical, energy, and environmental applications. They can reduce energy barriers and increase reaction rates for desirable transformations, making many critical large-scale processes feasible, eco-friendly, energy-efficient, and affordable. Advances in nanotechnology have ushered in a new era for heterogeneous catalysis. Nanoscale catalytic materials are known to surpass their conventional macro-sized counterparts in performance and precision, owing it to their ultra-high surface activities and unique size-dependent quantum properties. In water treatment, nanocatalysts can offer significant promise for novel and ecofriendly pollutant degradation technologies that can be tailored for customer-specific needs. In particular, nano-palladium catalysts have shown promise in degrading larger molecules, making them attractive for mitigating emerging contaminants. However, the applicability of nanomaterials, including nanocatalysts, in practical deployable and ecofriendly devices, is severely limited due to their easy proliferation into the service environment, which raises concerns of toxicity, material retrieval, reusability, and related cost and safety issues. To overcome this limitation, matrix-supported hybrid nanostructures, where nanocatalysts are integrated with other solids for stability and durability, can be employed. The interaction between the support and nanocatalysts becomes important in these materials and needs to be well investigated to better understand their physical, chemical, and catalytic behavior. This review paper presents an overview of recent studies on matrix-supported Pd-nanocatalysts and highlights some of the novel emerging concepts. The focus is on suitable approaches to integrate nanocatalysts in water treatment applications to mitigate emerging contaminants including halogenated molecules. The state-of-the-art supports for palladium nanocatalysts that can be deployed in water treatment systems are reviewed. In addition, research opportunities are emphasized to design robust, reusable, and ecofriendly nanocatalyst architecture.

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