Palladium Bio-Nanocomposite as an Efficient Heterogeneous Catalyst for Nitro Reduction: Fungus Mediated Green and Sustainable Process

Abstract

Metallic nanocatalysts such as Palladium nanoparticles (Pd-NPs) possess remarkable catalytic activity owing to their high surface-to-volume ratio; however, aggregation and metal leaching significantly compromise their stability and practical applicability. In this work, we report a facile and sustainable biosynthetic route for the preparation of bio-stabilized Pd-NPs using the fungal strain Aspergillus trinidadensis VM ST01 (OL587588) as a green reducing and capping agent. The strategy enables simultaneous bio-reduction of Pd²⁺ ions, nucleation and in-situ surface functionalization without the use of hazardous chemicals, surfactants, buffer, or external stabilizers. The influence of culture age (24–54 h), biomass loading (0.08–0.24 g/mL), and incubation time (8–24 h) on nanoparticle formation was systematically investigated to achieve controlled synthesis. Comprehensive physicochemical characterization (UV–Vis, FT-IR, XRD, SEM, TEM, elemental mapping, EDX, XPS, and TGA) confirmed the formation of uniformly distributed Pd-NPs with an average size of ~35 nm, embedded and stabilized within the fungal biomass matrix. The bio-organic framework surrounding the nanoparticles effectively suppresses aggregation and minimizes palladium leaching, thereby enhancing catalyst durability. The catalytic performance of the biosynthesized AtPdNPs was evaluated for the hydrogenation of nitro-benzene (NB) to amino-benzene (AB) as a model reaction under mild and aqueous conditions (NaBH₄, ambient temperature and pressure). The optimized catalyst (0.16 g/mL biomass, 36 h culture age, 24 h incubation) achieved complete conversion within 30 min, delivering a turnover frequency (TOF) of 832 h⁻¹ and a turnover number (TON) of 416. The kinetics for the reduction of NB to AB was investigated and the catalytic activity of AtPdNPs was evaluated with pseudo first-order rate constant (kapp). The in-situ bio-coating of AtPdNPs significantly reduces palladium leaching (< 1.5% ppm), enhances storage stability and make it environmentally compatible material. As a result, the catalyst maintains its structural integrity and catalytic performance under industry relevant conditions.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Mar 2026
Accepted
26 May 2026
First published
28 May 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale Adv., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Palladium Bio-Nanocomposite as an Efficient Heterogeneous Catalyst for Nitro Reduction: Fungus Mediated Green and Sustainable Process

H. B. Rathod, A. Deshmukh, Y. Desai and P. N. Patel, Nanoscale Adv., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6NA00174B

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