0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Advanced Nanotechnology in Wastewater Treatment: Investigating the Role of Nanoparticles in Pollutant Removal, Water Recovery, and Environmental Sustainability

Scholars Journal of Engineering and Technology 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Shamim Gul, Muhammad Faizan Nazar, Muhammad Nabeel Sharif, Rida Tariq, I. Fatima, Ayesha Sarfraz, Muhammad Zaheer, Rubab Sarfraz, Zaleha Mustafa

Summary

This review examines how nanotechnology-based approaches — including nanoparticle adsorbents, nanofiltration membranes, and photocatalysts — can address persistent water pollutants including pharmaceuticals, microplastics, and heavy metals more effectively than conventional treatment methods.

Study Type Environmental

The severe global water crisis associated with industrialization, urbanization and climate change brings with it the urgent necessity for more advanced and sustainable wastewater treatment technologies. Furthermore, the emerging contaminants, pharmaceuticals, microplastics and heavy metals are not treated at all by traditional treatment methods. As such, nanotechnology can address this problem efficiently, highly reactively, and in various sizes. The current work reviews the ability of metal oxides, carbon-based materials, or biosynthesized nanomaterials in removing organic, inorganic, or microbial pollutants. In detail, key mechanisms (adsorption, photocatalysis, ion exchange and electrochemical degradation) are discussed, and some specific applications of nanomaterials (TiO₂, CNTs, nZVI and graphene oxide) are reviewed. Additionally, nanotechnology has a wide range of applications, including integration into water recovery systems, decentralized treatment units, and real-time monitoring sensors. But there are environmental risks, it’s hard to get nanoparticle aggregations into specific forms, and implications for regulation are uncertain. Finally, future trends such as the development of hybrid systems, smart nanomaterials and AI in combination with treatment processes are outlined in this paper. However, based on the responsible and innovative application of nanotechnology in wastewater treatment, there are immense promises for achieving environmental sustainability and global water security.

Share this paper