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Engineered nanocatalysts for degradation and valorisation of micro/nanoplastics

Chemical Communications 2026 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Emansi Yadav, Emansi Yadav, Aakanksha Pathak, Krishna Mohan Poluri, Krishna Mohan Poluri

Summary

This review explored how engineered nanocatalysts can break down micro- and nanoplastics and convert them into useful products. Researchers highlighted several promising technologies, including microrobots, nanozymes, and solar-powered systems that can efficiently degrade persistent plastic particles. The study suggests that catalytic approaches offer a pathway toward both cleaning up plastic pollution and supporting a circular economy by turning waste into valuable materials.

Study Type Environmental

Transforming plastic waste into value-added products is central to advancing a circular economy and reducing the escalating burden of micro/nanoplastic (MP/NP) pollution. These emerging contaminants infiltrate freshwater, marine, and soil environments, posing serious ecological/toxicological risks. MP/NPs alter the environment-health nexus, and their smaller size, hydrophobicity, and persistence make them difficult to mitigate; thus developing effective degradation strategies has become crucial. The catalytic degradation mechanism has gained attention as a promising alterative capable of reforming persistent MP/NP pollutants into valuable products and fuels. Owing to their tunable physicochemical properties, engineered nanocatalysts offer efficient charge separation, selective bond cleavage and energy-efficient transformation of MP/NPs. This review provides a comprehensive overview of catalytic pathways governing nanocatalyst-mediated degradation of MP/NPs, along with a framework for designing advanced engineered nanocatalysts including microrobots, micromachines, MXenes, nanozymes and engineered organic framework-based catalysts. Further, the review focuses on utilization of these advanced nanocatalysts as green and sustainable approaches for efficient degradation/valorisation of MP/NPs. The practical feasibility is evidenced through recent real-world applications such as solar photopanels, seawater-deployable floaters and self-powered nanogenerator systems. Notably, the influence of nanocatalyst morphology on the degradation efficiency of MP/NPs has also been evaluated. Finally, the review evaluates the scale-up potential of engineered nanocatalysts and the applicability of high value products, supporting the translation of engineered nanocatalysts into practical, circular-economy-driven plastic waste solutions. Overall, this review reframes micro- and nanoplastic remediation from conventional degradation to catalytic valorisation, guided by mechanistic insights and advanced nanocatalyst design for real-world implementation.

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