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Keywords = bio-carbon content

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20 pages, 3246 KB  
Article
Shelf-Life Evaluation of Stored Vermicompost Organic Fertilizer via PCA-PLS Modeling
by Kongtan Wang, Dingmei Wang, Yuqi Pang, Xiaolan Yu, Liwen Mai, Shiliang Peng, Qinfen Li and Jiacong Lin
Agriculture 2026, 16(13), 1377; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16131377 (registering DOI) - 24 Jun 2026
Abstract
Vermicomposting is an eco-friendly biotechnology for organic waste valorization. As the primary product of earthworm biotransformation, vermicompost is a high-value bio-organic fertilizer abundant in diverse biologically active components. To date, most studies have focused on quality variation during the earthworm transformation process, while [...] Read more.
Vermicomposting is an eco-friendly biotechnology for organic waste valorization. As the primary product of earthworm biotransformation, vermicompost is a high-value bio-organic fertilizer abundant in diverse biologically active components. To date, most studies have focused on quality variation during the earthworm transformation process, while research on quality variations in the resulting vermicompost fertilizer during long-term storage remains scarce. To explore the shelf-life of vermicompost fertilizer and its key influencing indicators, this study investigated the changes in quality indicators in sealed-packaged vermicompost over a 180-day period using two typical vermicompost, namely cattle manure vermicompost (CM) and straw-amended cattle manure vermicompost (CMS). The temporal dynamics of physicochemical properties, nutrient contents, humification indices, enzyme activities, and microbial communities were monitored. The vermicompost quality was evaluated, and core quality drivers were identified using an integrated principal component analysis-partial least squares (PCA-PLS) approach. The results indicated that moisture content (MC), total organic carbon (TOC), and total nitrogen (TN) declined progressively, whereas available phosphorus (AP) and available potassium (AK) peaked at day 150 and day 120, respectively, and the humification rate (HR) increased by 2.6–4.0-fold. Bacterial diversity and relative abundance slightly decreased, accompanied by taxonomic differentiation, whereas fungal communities maintained stable diversity. Most enzyme activities, including urease, phosphatase, catalase, and dehydrogenase, reached their maxima at day 120. Comprehensive quality scores peaked at day 150, with a marked decline observed by day 180. The recommended shelf-life of vermicompost fertilizer is 150 days. The key quality determinants include TN, electrical conductivity (EC), pH, actinomycete abundance, TOC, TP, bacterial abundance, AP, AK, and HR. These findings provide theoretical support and references for the storage management and quality control of commercial vermicompost products in practice. Full article
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29 pages, 2672 KB  
Review
From Agricultural Waste to Industrial Feedstock: A Review on Multiphase Conversion Mechanisms and Material Reconstruction of Tomato Residues
by Yuxuan Chen, Bin Li, Xiaohu Guo, Shiguo Wang, Yang Liu and Zhong Tang
Agronomy 2026, 16(12), 1177; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy16121177 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 315
Abstract
With the expansion of modern protected agriculture, the amount of post-harvest tomato biomass has increased sharply. Conventional unmanaged disposal practices disrupt carbon flows and cause substantial environmental emissions. Tomato plant residues (TPRs), which are rich in lignocellulose and selected high-value secondary metabolites, have [...] Read more.
With the expansion of modern protected agriculture, the amount of post-harvest tomato biomass has increased sharply. Conventional unmanaged disposal practices disrupt carbon flows and cause substantial environmental emissions. Tomato plant residues (TPRs), which are rich in lignocellulose and selected high-value secondary metabolites, have considerable potential as feedstocks for green industrial materials. However, their complex biophysical properties, high physiological moisture content, and recalcitrant cell-wall barriers hinder large-scale processing. This review systematically examines the mechanisms and process architectures for converting TPRs into macromolecular products. First, it analyzes cross-scale anatomical heterogeneity and dynamic rheological properties of TPRs, defining their physicochemical boundaries as industrial precursors. Second, it summarizes the development of physical field-coupled equipment, ranging from anti-tangling harvest-shredding to die-roller densification. Furthermore, it examines the core mechanisms of multi-field-coupled pretreatment technologies, including steam explosion, deep eutectic solvents (DES), and mechanochemistry, in deconstructing vascular skeletons and reducing multiphase mass-transfer resistance. Finally, this review discusses reconstruction pathways for TPR-derived components in advanced polymer materials, including biodegradable nanocellulose films, bio-based composites, aerogels, and lignin-based polyurethane networks. Overall, it links microscopic reaction kinetics with macroscopic equipment engineering, proposes a closed-loop material conversion system from in-field volume reduction to cascaded biorefinery, and provides an engineering framework for future multi-machine intelligent collaboration and continuous production across the industrial chain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Biosystem and Biological Engineering)
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29 pages, 11249 KB  
Article
Different Forms of the Adaptogen Bacopa monnieri (Brahmi) in the Synthesis of RPU/PIR Foams
by Joanna Liszkowska, Justyna Miłek, Krzysztof Moraczewski and Krzysztof Szabliński
Polymers 2026, 18(12), 1471; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18121471 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 275
Abstract
Various forms of Bacopa monnieri (BM), including original powder (Mp), tea form (Mo), and post-extraction residues (Mf), were used as natural bio-based additives in rigid polyurethane–polyisocyanurate (RPU/PIR) foams. The study investigated the influence of BM form and content on the physical, mechanical, thermal, [...] Read more.
Various forms of Bacopa monnieri (BM), including original powder (Mp), tea form (Mo), and post-extraction residues (Mf), were used as natural bio-based additives in rigid polyurethane–polyisocyanurate (RPU/PIR) foams. The study investigated the influence of BM form and content on the physical, mechanical, thermal, and flammability properties of the foams. The results demonstrated that both the type and concentration of BM significantly affected foam performance. Foams containing Mf exhibited the lowest apparent density and reduced brittleness, whereas foams modified with Mp showed the highest compressive strength. The incorporation of BM also contributed to reduced flammability and enhanced thermal resistance of the foams. Thermal analysis indicated that BM additives modified the degradation behavior of RPU/PIR foams by promoting char formation and improving thermal stability at elevated temperatures. In particular, samples containing tea and post-extraction residues showed increased stability of the carbonized residue during the final degradation stage. The most favorable overall properties were obtained for BM contents between 3 and 7 wt%, while higher filler concentrations negatively affected the structural integrity of the foam matrix. The results confirm that the performance of RPU/PIR foams strongly depends on the balance between matrix continuity and biofiller functionality. The obtained materials show potential for application in floristry products and lightweight insulating systems where low density, dimensional stability, and enhanced thermal resistance are required. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Polyurethane Functionalization and Recycling)
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15 pages, 3305 KB  
Entry
Bamboo as a Functional Gradient Biomaterial
by Jose Israel Cardenas-Jimenez, Diógenes de Jesus Ramirez-Ramirez and Cristian David Correa-Álvarez
Encyclopedia 2026, 6(6), 128; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia6060128 - 10 Jun 2026
Viewed by 261
Definition
Bamboo as a functional gradient biomaterial refers to the understanding of bamboo culms as naturally hierarchical, anisotropic, and radially heterogeneous lignocellulosic structures whose mechanical, chemical, and conversion properties vary across the wall thickness. Gradients in fiber volume fraction, vascular bundle distribution, moisture, density, [...] Read more.
Bamboo as a functional gradient biomaterial refers to the understanding of bamboo culms as naturally hierarchical, anisotropic, and radially heterogeneous lignocellulosic structures whose mechanical, chemical, and conversion properties vary across the wall thickness. Gradients in fiber volume fraction, vascular bundle distribution, moisture, density, mineral content, and silica deposition influence stiffness, strength, durability, permeability, surface hardness, and thermal conversion behavior. This entry treats bamboo not only as a renewable plant resource, but also as a biologically organized material platform for structural components, engineered composites, and carbon-rich products such as biochar and activated carbon. A gradient-based view helps connect bamboo characterization with layer-aware processing, feedstock classification, and circular bio-based material design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Material Sciences)
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15 pages, 2724 KB  
Article
Physicochemical Stability of Dentin-Derived Biomaterials During Long-Term Storage
by Robert Dłucik, Alberto Scoglio, Domenico Puzzolo, Barbara Testagrossa, Angela Alibrandi, Antonio Toscano, Bogusława Orzechowska-Wylęgała and Giuseppe Acri
J. Funct. Biomater. 2026, 17(6), 284; https://doi.org/10.3390/jfb17060284 - 7 Jun 2026
Viewed by 643
Abstract
Dentin-derived biomaterials are hierarchical collagen–mineral composites increasingly used as bio-based scaffolds for bone regeneration. However, the effect of prolonged storage of extracted teeth on their physicochemical integrity remains unclear. This study evaluated the stability of dentin-derived biomaterials following long-term refrigerated storage (up to [...] Read more.
Dentin-derived biomaterials are hierarchical collagen–mineral composites increasingly used as bio-based scaffolds for bone regeneration. However, the effect of prolonged storage of extracted teeth on their physicochemical integrity remains unclear. This study evaluated the stability of dentin-derived biomaterials following long-term refrigerated storage (up to six years) using Raman spectroscopy. Extracted human teeth were processed using three preparation systems (BonMaker, Tooth Transformer, and Smart Dentin Grinder), and Raman-derived indices describing mineral and collagen structure were compared with freshly extracted controls. No time-dependent changes were observed in mineral crystallinity, carbonate substitution, or collagen-related parameters, indicating preservation of the collagen–mineral interface during storage. In contrast, the observed differences were primarily associated with processing pathways. Tooth Transformer and Smart Dentin Grinder exhibited Raman profiles closely resembling native dentin, whereas BonMaker showed reduced mineral content and altered mineral–matrix balance consistent with its demineralization protocol. These findings demonstrate that dentin behaves as a structurally stable hierarchical composite, reflecting intrinsic structural organization that limits physicochemical degradation over time. Long-term storage does not compromise dentin integrity, supporting its use as a reliable source of biomaterial for regenerative applications and future tooth banking strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Dental Biomaterials)
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15 pages, 5469 KB  
Article
Development of Mycelium Leather from Rice Straw Using the White-Rot Fungus Trametes sp. SW25-2
by Pisit Thamvithayakorn, Nattatida Prasobmate, Bancha Thampraphaphon, Duangkaew Roekmongkolwit, Panumas Dechpong, Cherdchai Phosri and Nuttika Suwannasai
Appl. Microbiol. 2026, 6(6), 67; https://doi.org/10.3390/applmicrobiol6060067 - 5 Jun 2026
Viewed by 305
Abstract
Twelve white-rot fungal isolates were evaluated for their potential to produce mycelium leather from rice straw, based on growth characteristics, biomass production, and mechanical properties. Among these, Trametes sp. SW25-2 exhibited rapid growth on culture medium and dense mycelial formation on rice straw [...] Read more.
Twelve white-rot fungal isolates were evaluated for their potential to produce mycelium leather from rice straw, based on growth characteristics, biomass production, and mechanical properties. Among these, Trametes sp. SW25-2 exhibited rapid growth on culture medium and dense mycelial formation on rice straw substrate. The effects of nutrient supplementation, substrate-to-medium ratio, and processing conditions on mycelium-leather formation were systematically examined. No significant differences were observed among different carbon (glucose, maltose, and sucrose) and nitrogen sources (yeast extract, peptone, and ammonium sulphate), indicating that the fungus effectively utilised rice straw as the primary substrate. An optimal ratio of 1 g rice straw to 10 mL culture medium (90.9% moisture content) enabled complete colonisation and the formation of a compact mycelial structure, achieving a maximum tensile strength of 2.78 MPa under optimised hot-pressing conditions (120 °C, 60 s, 1 MPa). Hot-pressing conditions significantly influenced material properties. A higher temperature (120 °C) increased tensile strength but reduced elongation at break, while a lower temperature (60 °C) produced more flexible materials. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that post-treatment and hot pressing transformed the mycelial network into a dense and cohesive structure. The resulting mycelium leather demonstrated suitable physical properties and was successfully fabricated into prototype products, highlighting its potential as a sustainable bio-based material derived from agricultural waste. Full article
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30 pages, 7879 KB  
Article
Machine Learning for Relative Compressive Strength of Concrete Incorporating Agricultural Bio-Supplementary Cementitious Materials
by Leila Mirzaei, Clifford B. Fedler and Tewodros Ghebrab
Infrastructures 2026, 11(6), 190; https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures11060190 - 5 Jun 2026
Viewed by 362
Abstract
Agricultural biomass ashes are increasingly used as sustainable supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) to reduce cement-related carbon emissions and improve concrete performance. However, their effects on compressive strength depend on the SCM type, replacement level, and physical and chemical properties. These variables are often [...] Read more.
Agricultural biomass ashes are increasingly used as sustainable supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) to reduce cement-related carbon emissions and improve concrete performance. However, their effects on compressive strength depend on the SCM type, replacement level, and physical and chemical properties. These variables are often overlooked in machine learning studies focused on single SCM types and absolute strength prediction, limiting transferability across heterogeneous SCM datasets. This study develops an interpretable machine learning framework using a compiled dataset covering 18 agricultural biomass ash SCMs (bio-SCMs) used in concrete. Input features include concrete mixture proportions, the SCM replacement level, chemical composition, and specific surface area (SSA), while the target variable is the 28-day compressive-strength ratio relative to the companion control mixture. Among the five evaluated models, XGBoost achieved the best performance, with weighted 10-fold cross-validation R2 values around 0.80. SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP) results were interpreted as model associations rather than causal mechanisms. Higher SCM SiO2 content, pozzolanic oxide content, superplasticizer dosage, and baseline control mixture strength were associated with more favorable strength ratios; SCM SSA showed a mild positive tendency, whereas a higher SCM replacement level, water-to-binder ratio, and loss on ignition were associated with less favorable strength ratios. SCM-specific response analysis further identified literature-derived screening ranges based on observed and interpolated replacement levels rather than machine learning extrapolation. Full article
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25 pages, 1267 KB  
Article
Integrated Assessment of Bio-Based Phosphorus Fertilizers as an Alternative to Mineral Fertilizers
by Nieves Nunez-Romero, Barbara J. Cade-Menun, Ana M. García-López, Jose Manuel Quintero and Antonio Delgado
Agronomy 2026, 16(11), 1058; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy16111058 - 27 May 2026
Viewed by 485
Abstract
Sustainable phosphorus (P) management in agriculture requires a circular economy approach through the use of so-called bio-based fertilizers (BBFs). The properties of BBFs vary widely depending on raw materials and production processes. However, it is still unknown how these properties, and particularly the [...] Read more.
Sustainable phosphorus (P) management in agriculture requires a circular economy approach through the use of so-called bio-based fertilizers (BBFs). The properties of BBFs vary widely depending on raw materials and production processes. However, it is still unknown how these properties, and particularly the dominant P compounds determine not only the efficiency of BBFs in supplying P to crops, but also their effects on soil functioning and crop quality. This study aimed to evaluate the efficiency of a representative set of BBFs, and relate this efficiency to their composition and dominant P compounds. To this end, 14 BBFs were studied: four from water purification (struvite, vivianite, and sewage sludge with and without composting), four composts (municipal solid waste (MSW), vineyard residues, and two using olive husks), three vermicomposts (two homemade and one commercial), fish meal, digestate, and a commercial organic fertilizer. Phosphorus forms in BBFs were determined using 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (P-NMR). The BBFs were compared to a single superphosphate (SSP) in a pot experiment growing wheat in two different alkaline soils, one rich in iron (Fe) oxides and one rich in carbonates. The effects on critical elements in grain [magnesium, Fe, zinc (Zn), manganese, and copper] and enzyme activities related to soil functioning and P cycling were also assessed. The dominant P compound in the BBFs was orthophosphate (73.8–89.5% of the total P in the NaOH–EDTA extracts). The MSW had the highest polyphosphate content (4.1%), a complex inorganic P compound. The organic P content ranged from 9.2% (fish meal) to 25.5% (Moge). Sewage sludge and composted sludge contributed high levels of phosphonates (4.1 and 5.6% of extracted P). The most abundant organic P compound class was inositol hexakisphosphates (IHPs), and myo-IHP (phytate) was the dominant IHP stereoisomer (1.2–6.4%) followed by D-chiro-IHP and scyllo-IHP. Plant dry matter and grain yield with most BBFs were not significantly different from that of SSP in both soils, likely due to the high concentrations of phosphate in relatively soluble forms in most of the BBFs. Vivianite and sewage sludge resulted in significantly higher grain yield than SSP (43% and 40%, respectively) in the carbonate-rich soil, likely due to progressive phosphate dissolution, which decreased the precipitation rate of insoluble calcium (Ca) phosphates. The highest P recoveries were obtained with horse manure vermicompost (65% and 15% higher than SSP in the Fe oxide-rich and in the carbonate-rich soil, respectively), partially attributed to the decreased precipitation rate of insoluble Ca phosphates with the added organic matter. Some BBFs increased micronutrient concentrations in grains and most decreased the P-to-Zn ratio relative to SSP. Overall, phosphatase and β-glucosidase activities increased with carbon-rich BBFs. Most of the studied BBFs could effectively replace fertilizers from non-renewable sources, in some cases with better crop P recoveries. Furthermore, some BBFs could provide additional benefits to grain quality, in terms of micronutrient supply for humans, and soil functioning. Full article
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34 pages, 2950 KB  
Article
Life Cycle Assessment of an Emerging, Innovative Biopolymer: Poly(Ethylene Furanoate)
by Ángel Puente, Ed de Jong, Ingrid Goumans, Pedro Braña, Janet Molina-Maturano and Matthias Stratmann
Sustainability 2026, 18(11), 5367; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18115367 - 26 May 2026
Viewed by 776
Abstract
Achieving a circular and climate-neutral bioeconomy by 2050 requires not only high-quality recycling but also the large-scale integration of renewable carbon from biomass and atmospheric CO2 into material systems. Plastics represent the world’s largest and most rapidly growing carbon sink, positioning them [...] Read more.
Achieving a circular and climate-neutral bioeconomy by 2050 requires not only high-quality recycling but also the large-scale integration of renewable carbon from biomass and atmospheric CO2 into material systems. Plastics represent the world’s largest and most rapidly growing carbon sink, positioning them as a critical intervention point for replacing fossil-based feedstocks with renewable alternatives. Because plastic packaging is one of the most visible material streams encountered by consumers in daily life, a transition toward sustainable, recyclable bioplastics has the potential to deliver both meaningful environmental benefits and strong societal impact, accelerating public awareness and acceptance of renewable carbon solutions. Poly(ethylene furanoate) (PEF)—a fully bio-based polyester synthesized from plant-derived 2,5-furandicarboxylic acid (FDCA) and monoethylene glycol (MEG)—offers a promising pathway toward more sustainable packaging due to its superior mechanical strength and gas-barrier performance relative to polyethylene terephthalate (PET). This study presents a cradle to grave life cycle assessment (LCA) of PEF resin production and PEF bottle applications, using industrially relevant, at-scale process data covering biomass feedstock conversion, polymer synthesis, packaging manufacture, use phase, and end of life. Bottle applications were selected as a focal point due to their technical maturity, commercial relevance, and suitability for direct comparison with incumbent PET systems. The results indicate that PEF can reduce greenhouse gas emissions by up to 71% and fossil resource depletion by 26% compared to PET at the resin level when biogenic carbon uptake is included. Moreover, the material’s enhanced functional properties enable lightweight, recyclable bottle designs with carbon footprint reductions of up to 88% for 500 mL formats under a baseline recycling rate scenario of 72%, with the remaining share directed to municipal solid-waste incineration with energy recovery. Sensitivity analyses reveal that virgin PEF maintains environmental advantages over PET even when PET incorporates high levels of recycled content, highlighting the complementary roles of renewable carbon and circular material strategies. Prospective scenario modeling underscores the importance of sustainable feedstock selection and process electrification, with sucrose-based routes offering the largest potential for further decarbonization. Overall, the findings demonstrate that PEF is a scalable biopolymer capable of delivering substantial climate benefits while supporting circularity objectives. By targeting a highly visible consumer application—plastic packaging—this transition amplifies the societal impact of adopting renewable carbon materials. The study provides actionable insights for policymakers, industry stakeholders, and sustainability practitioners working to advance a more resilient, renewable, and consumer-recognizable plastics economy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Materials: Recycled Materials Toward Smart Future)
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21 pages, 23462 KB  
Article
Protonated Defect-Engineered Carbon Nitride Enables Bio-Interface-Enhanced Photodynamic Antibacterial Activity with Potential Periodontal Application
by Ran Li, Guixin Zhu, Junchi Dong, Boyao Lu and Xing Liang
Materials 2026, 19(11), 2191; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19112191 - 22 May 2026
Viewed by 234
Abstract
Periodontitis is a biofilm-associated inflammatory disease that still requires effective local non-antibiotic antibacterial strategies. In this study, we developed a protonated defect-engineered atomic-layered graphitic carbon nitride nano-system (PVCN) for visible light photodynamic antibacterial therapy. Defect engineering was used to improve visible light absorption [...] Read more.
Periodontitis is a biofilm-associated inflammatory disease that still requires effective local non-antibiotic antibacterial strategies. In this study, we developed a protonated defect-engineered atomic-layered graphitic carbon nitride nano-system (PVCN) for visible light photodynamic antibacterial therapy. Defect engineering was used to improve visible light absorption and photodynamic activity, while protonation introduced a positively biased surface potential to strengthen bacteria–material interactions and enhance interfacial antibacterial efficacy. Under visible light irradiation, PVCN showed increased ROS production, stronger bacterial adhesion, and rapid killing activity against both Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, with bactericidal efficiency above 95%. PVCN also disrupted S. aureus biofilms and induced membrane damage, intracellular content leakage, and metabolic suppression. Atomic force microscopy and omics analyses further supported enhanced bacterial adsorption as an important contributor to the improved antibacterial efficacy of PVCN. In vitro assays demonstrated preliminary cytocompatibility and hemocompatibility. In a ligature-induced mouse periodontitis model, PVCN reduced bacterial burden, alleviated inflammation, and attenuated alveolar bone loss. These results support PVCN as a promising photodynamic antibacterial material with preliminary therapeutic potential in experimental periodontitis, and highlight bio-interface regulation as a useful strategy for designing efficient carbon nitride-based photodynamic antibacterial materials. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biomaterials)
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61 pages, 4021 KB  
Review
Advanced Characterization of Eco-Friendly Cement Composites: Hydration Kinetics, Microstructure, and Mechanical Performance
by Damir Barbir, Pero Dabić and Ivana Weber
Buildings 2026, 16(9), 1829; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16091829 - 4 May 2026
Viewed by 321
Abstract
This review synthesizes recent advances in the characterization of eco-friendly cement composites, focusing on hydration kinetics, microstructural evolution, and mechanical durability. Advanced techniques—from isothermal calorimetry to nanoindentation—enable decoding of reaction pathways, mix optimization, and long-term performance prediction. The analysis covers supplementary cementitious materials [...] Read more.
This review synthesizes recent advances in the characterization of eco-friendly cement composites, focusing on hydration kinetics, microstructural evolution, and mechanical durability. Advanced techniques—from isothermal calorimetry to nanoindentation—enable decoding of reaction pathways, mix optimization, and long-term performance prediction. The analysis covers supplementary cementitious materials (fly ash, slag, silica fume), geopolymers, bio-based additives (SNSs, biochar, CNCs, lignosulfonates), and microbially induced calcite precipitation (MICP). For each category, key mechanisms are identified, property effects quantified, and microstructural correlations established. SCMs achieve pore refinement and enhanced durability through long-term pozzolanic reactions. Geopolymers exhibit exceptional thermal stability (800–1000 °C) and acid resistance. Fly ash-based geopolymers exhibit chloride diffusion coefficients 1–2 orders of magnitude lower than ordinary Portland cement (OPC), though slag-based systems show more moderate improvements due to their different pore structure and higher calcium content. Bio-based additives enable accelerated hydration (SNSs), internal curing and CO2 sequestration (biochar), pore refinement (CNCs), workability enhancement (lignosulfonates), and autonomous crack healing (MICP). Multi-scale characterization is essential for establishing robust structure–property relationships. The review concludes that properly optimized eco-friendly cement composites offer viable pathways toward sustainable construction with reduced carbon footprint, enhanced durability, and extended service life. This review is novel in its systematic comparison of hydration kinetics, microstructural evolution, and mechanical performance across three distinct classes of eco-friendly additives (SCMs, geopolymers, and bio-based materials), with particular emphasis on the complementarity of advanced characterization techniques—an aspect that has received limited attention in previous reviews. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Composite Materials for Sustainable Construction)
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23 pages, 2472 KB  
Review
Biomass Pyrolysis: Recent Advances in Characterisation and Energy Utilisation
by Hamid Reza Nasriani and Maryam Nasiri Ghiri
Processes 2026, 14(8), 1321; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14081321 - 21 Apr 2026
Viewed by 709
Abstract
Biomass pyrolysis has emerged as a flexible platform for converting low-value residues into higher-value energy carriers (bio-oil, biochar and gas) and carbon-rich materials, with realistic potential for negative emissions when biochar is deployed in long-lived sinks. Over the last decade, three developments have [...] Read more.
Biomass pyrolysis has emerged as a flexible platform for converting low-value residues into higher-value energy carriers (bio-oil, biochar and gas) and carbon-rich materials, with realistic potential for negative emissions when biochar is deployed in long-lived sinks. Over the last decade, three developments have driven the field forward: first, a finer mechanistic understanding of devolatilization and secondary reactions; second, major improvements in analytical techniques for characterising feedstocks and products; and third, more rigorous techno-economic and life-cycle assessments that place pyrolysis in a broader energy-system context. Recent experimental work on forestry and agro-industrial residues has clarified how biomass composition, ash chemistry and operating conditions jointly govern product yields, energy content and stability. Parallel advances in GC×GC–MS, high-resolution mass spectrometry, NMR and thermogravimetric methods have shifted the discussion from bulk “bio-oil” and “char” to families of molecules and well-defined structural domains, which can be deliberately targeted by reactor and catalyst design. Data-driven models, ranging from support vector machines applied to TGA curves to ANFIS and random forests for yield prediction, are now accurate enough to support process screening and multi-objective optimisation. At the system level, commercial fast pyrolysis biorefineries report overall useful energy efficiencies on the order of 80–86%, while slow pyrolysis configurations centred on biochar can be economically viable when carbon storage and co-products are appropriately valued. Thermodynamic analyses confirm that indirect gasification via fast-pyrolysis oil sacrifices some energy and exergy efficiency relative to direct solid-biomass gasification but may offer logistical and integration advantages. This review synthesises recent work on (i) feedstock and process characterisation; (ii) state-of-the-art analytical methods for bio-oil, biochar and gas; (iii) modelling and machine-learning tools; and (iv) energy-system deployment of pyrolysis products. Throughout, the emphasis is on how characterisation and modelling inform concrete design choices and on the trade-offs that arise when pyrolysis is considered as part of a wider decarbonisation portfolio. By integrating laboratory-scale characterisation with system-level modelling, this review aligns biomass pyrolysis with several United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The optimisation of thermochemical conversion pathways for forestry and agro-industrial residues directly supports SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) by enhancing the efficiency of bio-oil and syngas production. Furthermore, the deployment of biochar as a stable carbon sink for negative emissions and soil amendment addresses SDG 13 (Climate Action) and SDG 15 (Life on Land). By converting low-value waste streams into high-value energy carriers and chemicals within a circular bioeconomy framework, the research further contributes to SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) and SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biomass Pyrolysis Characterization and Energy Utilization)
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26 pages, 4268 KB  
Article
Biowaste Moisture as a Regulator of Carbon Monoxide Formation During Composting: Analytical and Microstructural Insights Toward Sustainable Waste Valorization
by Karolina Sobieraj
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 3762; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18083762 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 498
Abstract
Rising industrial demand for carbon monoxide (CO) motivates the development of sustainable pathways for its production. Composting has recently emerged as a potential biogenic CO source, yet the role of biowaste moisture in CO production has remained unquantified. In this study, the moisture [...] Read more.
Rising industrial demand for carbon monoxide (CO) motivates the development of sustainable pathways for its production. Composting has recently emerged as a potential biogenic CO source, yet the role of biowaste moisture in CO production has remained unquantified. In this study, the moisture dependence of CO generation during composting was assessed to address this knowledge gap. Laboratory-scale biowaste composting was conducted under mesophilic conditions (45 °C) with passive aeration for the initial 14-day phase, using three initial moisture levels: 31.6% (variant M100), 21.6% (M90), and 12.6% (M80), and periodic H2O addition in M100 and M90. Monitoring of CO, CO2, and O2 concentrations, complemented by scanning electron microscopy of composts, revealed a non-monotonic moisture effect on CO formation. The intermediate-moisture treatment (M90; ~41–50%) was associated with the highest CO production, reaching a maximum of 681 ppm and 18.2 mg CO∙kg wet mass−1, whereas high moisture (M100; ~51–64%) with lower CO levels (max. 276 ppm, 4.4 mg CO∙kg wet mass−1), matrix compaction, elevated CO2 and lower O2 concentrations. The driest treatment produced trace CO (<20 ppm, max. 0.4 mg CO∙kg wet mass−1) and retained a rigid, porous microstructure consistent with limited biodegradation. The results showed rapid but transient CO pulses after H2O addition, implicating moisture-driven shifts in biological activity and/or abiotic formation. These findings identify an optimal moisture window for reproducible CO generation. Full article
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21 pages, 10280 KB  
Article
Multi-Layer Biocarbon Carbonized from Cellulose Nanocrystals as a Novel Lubricant Nanoadditive in Rapeseed Oil
by Minghang Guan, Kaiqi Su, Guodong Chen, Yu Cheng, Chao Chen, Haibin Zhou, Xiubo Liu and Yuan Meng
Materials 2026, 19(8), 1483; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19081483 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 542
Abstract
It is limited to use cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) as green lubricant nanoadditives due to their high biodegradability. A promising solution is to convert CNCs into biocarbon. Herein, a multi-layer biocarbon (MLC) was prepared by carbonizing CNCs with an ionic liquids–thermal method. MLC was [...] Read more.
It is limited to use cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) as green lubricant nanoadditives due to their high biodegradability. A promising solution is to convert CNCs into biocarbon. Herein, a multi-layer biocarbon (MLC) was prepared by carbonizing CNCs with an ionic liquids–thermal method. MLC was characterized comprehensively and then dispersed into rapeseed oil for use as a nanoadditive. The tribological performance of the MLC nanoadditive was evaluated using a ball-on-disc tribometer. The lubrication mechanism of the MLC nanoadditive was elucidated according to wear analysis of the worn surfaces and wear residues. It was found that MLC had a high carbon content of 77 at% and showed a two-dimensional multi-layered morphology. Each layer was composed of amorphous carbon nanosheets embedded with many crystalline carbon dots. The MLC nanoadditive was of excellent dispersibility and stability in rapeseed oil. Tribological experiments showed that the MLC nanoadditive, with a concentration of merely 0.04 wt%, led to a decrease in the frictional coefficient by 12.4% and the wear volume by 50.7%, having higher efficacy than the CNC nanoadditive. The exceptional lubrication effect of the MLC nanoadditive was mainly attributable to its interfacial deposition behavior and its subsequent fragmenting behavior. This work develops a novel method for biocarbon preparation and showcases its significant potential in lubrication applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Green Materials)
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Review
Research Trends and Gaps in Construction Insulation Materials from Textile Waste and End-of-Life Wind Turbine Blades with Bio-Binders
by German Vela, António Figueiredo, Vítor Costa and Romeu Vicente
Materials 2026, 19(7), 1465; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19071465 - 5 Apr 2026
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Abstract
Waste from the wind power and textile industries poses major environmental challenges. While the textile industry is a significant global contributor to waste, producing around 92 million tons of waste annually, and greenhouse gas emissions, wind power, although one of the cleanest energy [...] Read more.
Waste from the wind power and textile industries poses major environmental challenges. While the textile industry is a significant global contributor to waste, producing around 92 million tons of waste annually, and greenhouse gas emissions, wind power, although one of the cleanest energy sources during operation, still generates waste and associated CO2 emissions, particularly associated with the end-of-life decommissioning of turbine blades. This waste can be reused, combined with bio-based binders, to reduce the construction sector’s long-term environmental impact. The present work identifies research trends and gaps in the use of these waste materials, either individually or combined, for the development of thermal and acoustic insulation solutions for the construction sector, by means of a combined bibliometric and content analysis of Scopus and Web of Science documents from 2014 to 2025. The study focuses on bibliometric indicators and reports on physical properties (thermal conductivity, density, mechanical strength, and acoustic performance) of the resulting composites, including those produced with bio-binders. Additionally, a qualitative review of life cycle assessment studies indicates that bio-based and waste-derived insulation materials can significantly reduce environmental impacts compared with conventional mineral or petrochemical insulators. Results reveal growing scientific interest in this subject, highlighting an annual publication growth of 5.09%. They emphasize the performance of natural textile fibers in thermal and acoustic insulation, the mechanical capacity of synthetic fibers, and the semi-structural potential of fiberglass composites. Meanwhile, bio-binders improve the upcycling of textile waste; however, they reveal a significant research gap in the integration of wind turbine blade waste into insulation composites. No indexed studies were found that simultaneously combine textile waste, blade-derived fibers, and bio-based binders in a single insulation system, despite projected cumulative blade waste of 43 million tons by 2050. These findings advocate hybrid innovations and standardized assessments to drive circular economy and low-carbon building solutions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Green Materials)
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