Engineered Cellulose-Supported Photocatalysts for Clean Energy and Environmental Remediation: Progress and Prospects
Abstract
The growing global demand for sustainable energy and environmental remediation has accelerated interest in efficient, metal-free photocatalysts. Cellulose, with its abundance, biodegradability, tunable chemistry, high surface area, and mechanical robustness, has emerged as an ideal support material for photocatalytic systems. This review presents a comprehensive evaluation of cellulose-supported photocatalysts, detailing their structural forms, physicochemical properties, preparation strategies, and design principles. The classification into cellulose-based composites and structured architectures such as hydrogels, aerogels, membranes, and sponges highlights the versatility of cellulose in enhancing catalyst dispersion, charge separation, visible-light activity, and reusability. The applications include hydrogen and hydrogen peroxide generation, nitrogen fixation, CO₂ reduction, wastewater treatment, and disinfection. Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis provide insights into strengths, limitations, and research gaps, emphasizing challenges in large-scale fabrication, stability, and commercial viability.Furthermore, the review highlights the significance of environmental and economic analyses to guide sustainable scale-up and market adoption. Future directions focus on heterostructure engineering, defect modulation, green synthesis, AI-guided optimization, and integration into real-world systems. By bridging materials science, catalysis, and environmental engineering, cellulose-supported photocatalysts hold significant potential for scalable, eco-friendly, and multifunctional solutions aligned with the principles of green chemistry, circular economy, and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Advances in Sustainable Catalysis: from Materials to Energy and Environmental Applications
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