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Search Results (171)

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Keywords = urea oxidation reaction

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45 pages, 7257 KB  
Review
Nanostructured Catalysts for Electro- and Photocatalytic Energy Conversion: Design Strategies, Mechanistic Descriptors, and Practical Applications
by Xiangjun Kong, Xia Wang and Wulan Zeng
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(13), 788; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16130788 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Nanostructured catalysts have become a core component of energy conversion in electrocatalysis and photocatalysis; however, successfully translating their performance from laboratory scale to industrial applications remains a long-standing challenge. This paper provides a critical assessment of the field, systematically tracing the entire development [...] Read more.
Nanostructured catalysts have become a core component of energy conversion in electrocatalysis and photocatalysis; however, successfully translating their performance from laboratory scale to industrial applications remains a long-standing challenge. This paper provides a critical assessment of the field, systematically tracing the entire development trajectory from catalyst design to practical application. We focus on five major classes of catalysts—monometallic catalysts, bimetallic/multimetallic alloy catalysts, metal compound catalysts, carbon-based composite catalysts, and single-atom catalysts—and explore synthetic strategies for achieving precise structural control, including hydrothermal/solvothermal methods, electrodeposition, template-assisted and MOF-derived syntheses, high-temperature pyrolysis, and post-treatment defect engineering. This paper delves into the mechanisms and performance descriptors governing the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), oxygen evolution reaction (OER), oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), urea oxidation, photocatalytic water splitting, and CO2 reduction. Based on the above analysis, this paper lays the mechanistic foundation for five core strategies to improve catalyst performance: morphology control, elemental doping, heterostructure and interface engineering, defect and vacancy engineering, and support modification. Furthermore, this paper provides an in-depth evaluation of the applications of these catalysts in water splitting, CO2 valorization, fuel cells, metal–air batteries, and energy-saving electrolysis, with a particular focus on earth-abundant alternatives to precious metals. We argue that in many well-studied reactions, intrinsic activity may no longer be the primary bottleneck restricting their development; instead, the core challenge now lies in maintaining excellent catalytic performance under harsh and industrially relevant conditions, especially under high-current densities, impurity-containing feed systems, and long-term operating conditions. In response to this shift in research focus, this paper clearly identifies the key obstacles hindering the industrial application of catalysts and proposes practical directions for future research. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy and Catalysis)
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16 pages, 487 KB  
Article
CO2 Emissions from Urea Fertilizer in Pakistan, China, India, and the USA: A Comparative Analysis Using the IPCC Model
by Amanullah
Nitrogen 2026, 7(2), 63; https://doi.org/10.3390/nitrogen7020063 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 294
Abstract
The application of urea in agricultural practices leads to carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions through hydrolysis. Urea, when applied to soil, reacts with water and undergoes hydrolysis, releasing ammonia (NH3) and CO2. This reaction is facilitated by soil [...] Read more.
The application of urea in agricultural practices leads to carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions through hydrolysis. Urea, when applied to soil, reacts with water and undergoes hydrolysis, releasing ammonia (NH3) and CO2. This reaction is facilitated by soil enzymes such as urease. The released NH3 can further undergo nitrification, producing nitrate (NO3) and nitrous oxide (N2O). While CO2 from urea hydrolysis is relatively small compared to other sources, cumulative emissions from agricultural activities contribute significantly to climate change and agriculture’s carbon footprint. A straightforward calculation model (CO2 = A × 0.73) was employed to approximate CO2 emissions in various countries based on annual urea usage. In this model, China led emissions with 40,483 Gg yr−1, followed by India (26,031 Gg yr−1) and the USA (12,032 Gg yr−1). Out of total annual emissions (94,763 Gg), China contributed 43%, India 27%, the USA 13%, the EU 8%, Pakistan 5%, and Indonesia 4%. China’s CO2 emissions from urea were 16% higher than India, 30% higher than the USA, 35% higher than the EU, 38% higher than Pakistan, and 39% higher than Indonesia. As expected from the deterministic IPCC formula (CO2 = Urea × 0.73), the relationship between urea consumption and CO2 emissions is linear with a slope of 0.73. Linear regression shows that for every 1000-ton increase in urea consumption, CO2 emissions increase by 730 tons (0.73 Gg) (R2 = 0.99, p < 0.001). Pakistan’s urea consumption grew at an average annual rate of 2.2% from 2015 to 2023, with corresponding CO2 emissions increasing from 4015 to 4788 Gg yr−1 (total increase of 20% over eight years). Optimizing fertilizer application rates, timing, and methods to enhance nutrient uptake efficiency, along with sustainable agricultural practices (organic matter management, conservation tillage, and precision agriculture), can help mitigate environmental impacts. This study emphasizes implementing sustainable agricultural practices and integrated nutrient management to minimize CO2 emissions from urea application, enabling agricultural systems to contribute to climate change mitigation and reduced carbon footprints. Full article
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15 pages, 9796 KB  
Article
Magnetic Field Induced Spin State Optimization in Fe-Co Dual-Active Centers for Superior Trifunctional Water Splitting
by Yi Zheng, Xin Luo, Sizhe Li, Zhengxian Shen and Hui Su
Coatings 2026, 16(6), 659; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16060659 - 30 May 2026
Viewed by 478
Abstract
Faced with a global energy crisis and ecological degradation, overall water splitting (OWS) is a pivotal approach for renewable energy conversion and storage. However, its industrial application is hindered by the high energy barriers/sluggish kinetics of the anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER), as [...] Read more.
Faced with a global energy crisis and ecological degradation, overall water splitting (OWS) is a pivotal approach for renewable energy conversion and storage. However, its industrial application is hindered by the high energy barriers/sluggish kinetics of the anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER), as well as the scarcity of precious metal catalysts limiting large-scale deployment. Herein, a cobalt-based layered double hydroxide (Co-LDH) was used as the precursor, and a multi-strategy synergistic modification (hydrothermal synthesis, Fe doping, sulfurization, and external magnetic field magnetization) was applied to fabricate the Fe-Co3S4-MS-20 min electrocatalyst. This strategy establishes Fe-Co bimetallic synergistic active centers, and magnetic treatment modulates the electron configuration of Fe 3d orbitals without changing the material’s lattice spacing or morphology. Structural characterizations and electrochemical measurements were used to investigate the effects of combined modifications on the catalyst’s phase structure, morphology, electronic structure, and trifunctional catalytic performance toward the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), OER, and urea oxidation reaction (UOR). The Fe-Co3S4-MS-20 min catalyst exhibits a larger electrochemical active surface area, lower charge transfer resistance, and smaller Tafel slope in 1 M KOH, it achieves overpotentials of 165 mV for HER (10 mA·cm−2) and 310 mV for OER (100 mA·cm−2), along with superior UOR performance and long-term stability. In situ impedance and Raman spectroscopy confirm that magnetization accelerates charge transfer and promotes in situ reconstruction. Synergistic multi-strategy regulation optimizes the electronic structure of active centers, reducing electrocatalytic energy barriers. This work provides new insights into designing high-performance non-precious metal electrocatalysts and offers experimental support for external magnetic field regulation in electrocatalyst modification. Full article
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25 pages, 11834 KB  
Article
Multiple Reaction Monitoring (MRM)-Based Targeted Kidney Metabolite Profiling of a Mouse Model of Hyperuricemia
by Hailong Li, Tingting Tang, Qingli Zhang, Tingting Song, Zichu Zhao, Lei Zhu, Qu Chen, Haili Zhang, Yan Zhang and Jingjing Kong
Metabolites 2026, 16(6), 362; https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo16060362 - 27 May 2026
Viewed by 319
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Chronic urate nephropathy (CUN), also referred to as gouty nephropathy, represents a severe renal disease primarily precipitated by long-term hyperuricemia (HUA) and gout. However, the precise molecular mechanisms underlying its pathogenesis remain poorly understood. The present study was designed to explore these [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Chronic urate nephropathy (CUN), also referred to as gouty nephropathy, represents a severe renal disease primarily precipitated by long-term hyperuricemia (HUA) and gout. However, the precise molecular mechanisms underlying its pathogenesis remain poorly understood. The present study was designed to explore these mechanisms from the perspective of targeted metabolomics. Methods: The HUA mice constructed by urate oxidase (Uox) gene knockout (KO) and their corresponding wild-type controls were employed for the present study. Serum clinical biochemical parameters were determined, and renal histopathological changes were evaluated using hematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining and Masson’s trichrome staining. A targeted metabolomic strategy based on multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) was utilized to profile the renal metabolic landscape of Uox-KO mice, and potential metabolic biomarkers for CUN were identified via multivariate data analysis. Results: Clinical biochemical analysis revealed a significant elevation in serum uric acid, creatinine, and urea nitrogen levels in Uox-KO mice compared with control mice. Histopathological observations confirmed a typical CUN phenotype in Uox-KO mice, characterized by renal tubular vacuolar degeneration and dilatation, desquamation of tubular epithelial cells into the lumen, neutrophil infiltration, glomerular crowding, and renal interstitial fibrosis. Metabolomic analysis identified a total of 291 differentially regulated metabolites in Uox-KO mice relative to control animals. These perturbed metabolites were involved in multiple key biochemical pathways, including amino acid biosynthesis, ABC transporter signaling pathway, purine metabolism, aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis, protein digestion and absorption, glycerophospholipid metabolism, and serotonergic synaptic transmission. Notably, pathological parameters, including biochemical measurements and histological observations, were significantly correlated with key differential metabolites associated with CUN progression. Furthermore, eleven differential metabolites (pyroglutamic acid, fructose, riboflavin, dimethyl-L-arginine, glucaric acid, indoxyl sulfate, palmitoylethanolamide, trimethylamine N-oxide, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, spermidine, and hippuric acid) were identified as potential metabolic biomarkers for the diagnosis and prognosis of CUN. Conclusions: These findings illustrate that targeted tissue metabolomic analysis constitutes a powerful tool for deciphering the molecular mechanisms of diseases, thus offering novel insights into the pathogenesis of CUN. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Animal Models of Human Disease 3.0)
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20 pages, 1883 KB  
Article
Synthesis, Characterization, and Electrochemical Evaluation of Electrodeposited NiCuZn Powders for Urea Oxidation
by Agata Kołkowska, Wojciech Lisieński, Łukasz Gardas, Weizhi Shang, Aleksander Gąsior, Artur Maciej, Marta Wala-Kapica and Wojciech Simka
Materials 2026, 19(10), 1973; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19101973 - 10 May 2026
Viewed by 473
Abstract
The growing demand for sustainable energy technologies has intensified interest in direct urea fuel cells as an environmentally friendly energy conversion system. In this work, a ternary NiCuZn electrocatalyst is synthesized via a single-step electrodeposition process, offering a rapid and scalable alternative to [...] Read more.
The growing demand for sustainable energy technologies has intensified interest in direct urea fuel cells as an environmentally friendly energy conversion system. In this work, a ternary NiCuZn electrocatalyst is synthesized via a single-step electrodeposition process, offering a rapid and scalable alternative to commonly used hydrothermal or multistep fabrication routes. Structural and compositional analyses (SEM, EDX) confirm the formation of coral-shaped particles of NiCuZn powders. Electrochemical evaluation in alkaline media demonstrates that powders of both tested variants exhibit clear anodic activity, with peak potentials in the range of 0.4–0.6 Vvs Ag|AgCl (sat. KCl). Zinc presence was confirmed also after the process. Upon urea addition, a pronounced enhancement in anodic current density is observed. Notably, variant NiCuZn powder, which was produced using higher current density during electrodeposition, shows superior catalytic activity from approximately 0.4 Vvs Ag|AgCl (sat. KCl), reaching a maximum of 10 mA/cm2 near 0.75 Vvs Ag|AgCl (sat. KCl), and stability, which are attributed to its highly homogeneous microstructure and dynamic surface activation mechanism uniquely by partial zinc leaching during operation. These findings demonstrate that electrodeposited NiCuZn systems can deliver competitive performance despite their structural simplicity, highlighting their potential as cost-effective and scalable anode materials for direct urea fuel cell applications. We address a critical bottleneck in fuel cell manufacturing by replacing time-intensive hydrothermal syntheses with a rapid, highly scalable electrodeposition method. Furthermore, the identification of zinc-leaching mechanisms provides crucial new insights into dynamic catalyst activation, moving beyond traditional, static anode designs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Catalytic Materials)
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25 pages, 7879 KB  
Article
Simultaneous Adsorptive Removal of Arsenic(V) and Congo Red by a MgZnFe LDH/Triazole Composite with Electrocatalytic Urea Oxidation Application
by Samar M. Mahgoub, Abdelghafar M. Abu-Elsaoud, Seham M. Hamed, Ahmed A. Allam, Saber A. A. Elsuccary, Mahmoud M. Ghuniem, Hend A. Mahmoud, Vehaan Subramanian and Rehab Mahmoud
Catalysts 2026, 16(5), 434; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16050434 - 7 May 2026
Viewed by 595
Abstract
Water contamination by arsenic(V) [As(V)] and Congo red (CR) dye poses concurrent threats to public health and aquatic ecosystems, particularly in regions where metallurgical and textile industries coexist. Developing a single adsorbent capable of simultaneously addressing these chemically distinct pollutants, while recovering value [...] Read more.
Water contamination by arsenic(V) [As(V)] and Congo red (CR) dye poses concurrent threats to public health and aquatic ecosystems, particularly in regions where metallurgical and textile industries coexist. Developing a single adsorbent capable of simultaneously addressing these chemically distinct pollutants, while recovering value from the spent material remains an open challenge in sustainable water treatment. This study reports the synthesis and evaluation of a novel ternary MgZnFe-LDH/1,2,4-triazole composite (TM-LDH/TZ), engineered for the concurrent adsorptive removal of As(V) and CR, and the subsequent repurposing of the pollutant-loaded material as an electrocatalyst for the urea oxidation reaction (UOR). The composite was prepared via co-precipitation and triazole surface grafting, then characterized by FTIR, XRD, BET, TGA, FESEM, and HRTEM. Batch adsorption experiments examined the influence of pH, adsorbent dose, initial concentration, and temperature, with equilibrium data modeled through Langmuir, Freundlich, Temkin, and the statistically grounded Advanced Monolayer Model (AMM); kinetics were assessed using pseudo-first/second-order and Elovich models. Maximum Langmuir adsorption capacities reached 204.75 mg g−1 for As(V) and 499.72 mg g−1 for CR simultaneously at pH 5 and 25 °C, surpassing the majority of previously reported single-pollutant adsorbents. Elovich and pseudo-second-order kinetics confirmed chemisorption as the governing pathway for As(V) and CR, respectively, while AMM thermodynamic analysis verified spontaneous adsorption across all experimental conditions. The spent composite delivered a UOR peak current density of 184.67 mA cm−2 that is nearly twice that of the fresh material, with a reduced charge-transfer resistance of 1.19 Ω, and removal efficiency remained above 85% through three successive regeneration cycles. The bifunctional design, coupling high-capacity dual-pollutant removal with catalytic valorization of waste, positions TM-LDH/TZ as a circular-economy-aligned platform for advanced water remediation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Catalysis for Sustainable Energy)
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17 pages, 7001 KB  
Article
Green, Formaldehyde-Free Bio-Adhesive from Soybean Meal and Laccase-Oxidized Tannin via Quinone–Amine Crosslinking
by Shichao Zhang, Chengyuan Liu, Ya Ding, Yuan Yao, Hisham Essway, Xinyi Chen, Xiaojian Zhou, Hui Wang and Ming Cao
Polymers 2026, 18(8), 954; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18080954 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 582
Abstract
To develop a fully green and non-toxic wood adhesive with improved water resistance and bonding performance for soybean meal (Glycine max (L.) Merr.)-based adhesives, oxidized tannin (OTN) was obtained by the laccase treatment of waxberry tannin (TN), a natural polyphenolic polymer, and [...] Read more.
To develop a fully green and non-toxic wood adhesive with improved water resistance and bonding performance for soybean meal (Glycine max (L.) Merr.)-based adhesives, oxidized tannin (OTN) was obtained by the laccase treatment of waxberry tannin (TN), a natural polyphenolic polymer, and then blended with soybean meal (SM) to prepare an oxidized tannin–soybean meal adhesive (OTS). Laccase-mediated oxidation converted the tannin polymer into quinone-rich oxidized polymeric structures, which reacted with amino groups in soybean meal proteins through Michael addition and Schiff base reactions to form a covalently crosslinked polymeric network. Under the optimal conditions of a laccase dosage of 10%, an oxidation time of 6 h, an OTN:SM mass ratio of 0.5:1, and a hot-pressing temperature of 160 °C, plywood bonded with OTS exhibited a wet shear strength of 0.85 MPa at 63 °C, representing a 136% increase over that of the neat soybean meal adhesive, and showed slightly higher bonding performance than the commercial urea-formaldehyde (UF) resin under boiling-water conditions. Structural analyses (FT-IR and XPS) verified quinone formation and carbon–nitrogen single and double bonds. Thermal analyses (DSC and TGA) revealed improved curing reactivity and significantly enhanced thermal stability compared with the neat soybean meal adhesive. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biobased and Biodegradable Polymers)
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17 pages, 3974 KB  
Article
Synergistic Effect of N Doping and Ag Loading on Photocatalytic Degradation Performance of Rhodamine B by ZnO Nanoarrays
by Congwen Liu, Wei Deng, Hai Zhang, Xiaochen Han, Qiang Ran, Wenxuan Yu, Xiaoling Xu and Zuowan Zhou
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(7), 438; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16070438 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 673
Abstract
Photocatalytic degradation is a highly efficient, stable and promising technology for water treatment. Developing high-performance photocatalysts is crucial for removing aquatic contaminants. However, traditional zinc oxide (ZnO) photocatalysts are severely restricted by intrinsic drawbacks, such as a wide band gap, fast recombination of [...] Read more.
Photocatalytic degradation is a highly efficient, stable and promising technology for water treatment. Developing high-performance photocatalysts is crucial for removing aquatic contaminants. However, traditional zinc oxide (ZnO) photocatalysts are severely restricted by intrinsic drawbacks, such as a wide band gap, fast recombination of photogenerated carriers, and high photocorrosion tendency. Conventional powder catalysts also suffer from difficult recovery and serious secondary pollution. Therefore, developing simple strategies to fabricate high-performance, reusable, and stable ZnO-based photocatalysts is of great scientific and practical importance. In this work, silver-loaded nitrogen-doped ZnO nanoarrays (AgY@NX-ZnO NAs, where X and Y represent the urea and AgNO3 concentrations, respectively) were synthesized on 304 stainless steel sheets (SSS) using a two-step hydrothermal method combined with photoreduction at room temperature. The samples were characterized by XRD, FESEM, XPS, and UV-Vis DRS, and the catalytic mechanism was studied through active species trapping and EPR. Nitrogen doping and Ag loading exhibited a strong synergistic effect, narrowing the band gap, enhancing visible-light absorption, and promoting the separation of photogenerated carriers. The optimal sample (Ag1.5@N4-ZnO NAs) degraded 93.2% of Rhodamine B (RhB) within 180 min, with a reaction rate constant 2.65 times higher than pure ZnO. The main active species were ·O2 and ·OH. This work provides a feasible route to fabricate recyclable and stable stainless steel-based ZnO nanoarray photocatalysts for efficient water purification. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy and Catalysis)
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18 pages, 4068 KB  
Article
Reduced Nickel Cobalt Tungstate as an Efficient Electrocatalyst for Urea-Assisted Hydrogen Production
by Nitul Kakati, Ayon Karmakar, Marc Francis Labata and Po-Ya Abel Chuang
J. Compos. Sci. 2026, 10(3), 157; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs10030157 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 636
Abstract
Urea electrolysis has emerged as a promising alternative to conventional water electrolysis for hydrogen production, owing to low electrical energy consumption as well as organic wastewater. However, the practical implementation of this approach is primarily constrained by the lack of cost-effective and efficient [...] Read more.
Urea electrolysis has emerged as a promising alternative to conventional water electrolysis for hydrogen production, owing to low electrical energy consumption as well as organic wastewater. However, the practical implementation of this approach is primarily constrained by the lack of cost-effective and efficient electrocatalysts. Thus, the development of earth-abundant, non-precious metal-based bifunctional electrocatalysts toward both the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and the urea oxidation reaction (UOR) is of critical importance. In this context, nanostructured, reduced nickel-cobalt tungstate supported on Ni foam is fabricated as a binder-free, freestanding electrode via a two-step hydrothermal process followed by partial thermal reduction. By systematically tuning the precursor concentrations of Ni, Co, and W, the morphology and electronic structure of the material are effectively modulated. The introduction of oxygen vacancies through partial thermal reduction plays a key role in enhancing charge transport properties. The optimized NiCo@W0.5/NF electrode exhibits a porous, flower-like architecture and demonstrates excellent bifunctional electrocatalytic activity toward both UOR and HER, accompanied by improved mass transport behavior. When employed as both the anode and cathode for overall urea electrolysis, NiCo@W0.5/NF requires a low cell voltage of only 1.68 V to achieve a current density of 100 mA cm−2 and delivers impressive operational stability in an optimized electrolyte composed of 3 M KOH and 0.33 M urea. These results indicate that NiCo@W0.5/NF is a highly promising and efficient bifunctional electrode material for urea assisted hydrogen production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Composites Applications)
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16 pages, 4385 KB  
Article
Hierarchical Spiked Co0.85Se Microcrystals on Nickel Foam as an Efficient Electrocatalyst for Urea Oxidation Reaction
by John Anthuvan Rajesh, Shrine Maria Nithya Jeghan, Soon-Hyung Kang and Kwang-Soon Ahn
Catalysts 2026, 16(3), 232; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16030232 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 991
Abstract
We report the facile synthesis of hierarchical spiked cobalt selenide (Co0.85Se) microcrystals grown on nickel foam (NF) via a hydrothermal method followed by selenization. Derived from cobalt hydroxyl fluoride (Co(OH)F) microcrystals, the resulting Co0.85Se structures exhibit a robust architecture [...] Read more.
We report the facile synthesis of hierarchical spiked cobalt selenide (Co0.85Se) microcrystals grown on nickel foam (NF) via a hydrothermal method followed by selenization. Derived from cobalt hydroxyl fluoride (Co(OH)F) microcrystals, the resulting Co0.85Se structures exhibit a robust architecture with well-defined spikes that offer abundant active sites and promote efficient charge transfer, thereby enhancing their electrocatalytic bifunctional activity toward the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and urea oxidation reaction (UOR). The Co0.85Se/NF electrode delivers low overpotentials of 357 mV for OER and 236 mV for UOR at 100 mA cm−2. Furthermore, it exhibits a small Tafel slope (34.3 mV dec−1) and excellent durability for 24 h at 100 mA cm−2 during UOR. This simple and cost-effective strategy highlights the potential of hierarchical spiked Co0.85Se microcrystals as highly efficient electrocatalysts for urea-assisted OER and related sustainable energy conversion applications. Full article
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33 pages, 6237 KB  
Article
Sustainable Solar Mineralization of Polyvinylpyrrolidone via a Regenerable TiO2/Cellulose–Activated Carbon Composite with Integrated Waste Reuse for Urea Oxidation
by Samar M. Mahgoub, Hossain ABM Sharif, Ahmed A. Allam, Abdelatty M. Radalla, Hussein Nassar H. Eweis, Hala Mohamed and Rehab Mahmoud
Catalysts 2026, 16(3), 213; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal16030213 - 28 Feb 2026
Viewed by 884
Abstract
The persistence of water-soluble polymers such as polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) in aquatic environments presents a major challenge for conventional wastewater treatment. Herein, a sunlight-active TiO2/activated carbon (TiO2/AC) composite fabricated via a simple physical mixing route is reported for the synergistic [...] Read more.
The persistence of water-soluble polymers such as polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) in aquatic environments presents a major challenge for conventional wastewater treatment. Herein, a sunlight-active TiO2/activated carbon (TiO2/AC) composite fabricated via a simple physical mixing route is reported for the synergistic adsorption and photocatalytic mineralization of PVP K30. The optimal composite (2:1 weight ratio) exhibits a high surface area (412 m2 g−1) and an integrated anatase–carbon architecture. The process operates through a sequential “adsorb-and-shuttle” mechanism, whereby PVP is first concentrated on the composite in the dark (30.2% removal in 8 h) and subsequently degraded under solar irradiation. This dual function leads to 86.4% PVP removal and 72.1% total organic carbon (TOC) mineralization, demonstrating true polymer destruction rather than mere surface accumulation. The composite demonstrates robust performance in simulated wastewater, retaining over 68% PVP removal and 55% TOC mineralization in a complex matrix containing competing inorganic ions and natural organic matter. Spectroscopic and thermogravimetric analyses confirm PVP chain scission and near-complete removal of adsorbed residues. An optimized ethanol-washing protocol enables effective catalyst regeneration, with the composite retaining 85% of its initial activity after five cycles. A detailed techno-economic analysis confirms the economic viability of this regeneration strategy at industrial scales (>1000 kg/year), projecting cost savings exceeding 60% compared to fresh catalyst use. Importantly, the PVP-loaded spent TiO2–AC was successfully repurposed as an electrocatalyst for the urea oxidation reaction, achieving a high current density of 163.7 mA cm−2, which surpasses the performance of the pristine composite. The greenness of the overall process was validated using analytical eco-scale (ESA), method volume intensity (AMVI), and white analytical chemistry (WAC) metrics. Overall, this work presents a sustainable, solar-driven platform that advances a circular economy model, integrating effective polymer wastewater remediation with subsequent energy valorization of the spent material. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Catalysis for Energy and a Sustainable Environment)
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14 pages, 3460 KB  
Article
One-Step Preparation of N-Doped Coal-Based Carbon for H2S Desulfurization
by Xiaoliang Bai, Li Zhao, Zeyu Liu, Jie Liu, Kang Yan, Shoujun Liu and Song Yang
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(5), 2320; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16052320 - 27 Feb 2026
Viewed by 391
Abstract
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) commonly exists in natural gas, syngas, and coal-derived gas, and the elimination of H2S from industrial gases is essential before application. In this study, we utilized low-cost lignite as a raw material. After acid-washing pretreatment, nitrogen-containing [...] Read more.
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) commonly exists in natural gas, syngas, and coal-derived gas, and the elimination of H2S from industrial gases is essential before application. In this study, we utilized low-cost lignite as a raw material. After acid-washing pretreatment, nitrogen-containing substances (urea or dicyandiamide) were incorporated into the coal, and two types of N-modified activated carbon desulfurizers for ambient-temperature H2S removal were prepared via an in situ loading method, integrating the synthesis of activated carbon with the loading of active components. When the dicyandiamide content was 9 wt.%, and the oxygen concentration for desulfurization was 5%, the breakthrough time reached 550 min with a corresponding breakthrough sulfur capacity of 79.6 mg/g. Characterization revealed that the dicyandiamide-N-modified desulfurizer possessed elevated oxygen and nitrogen contents, which may partially augment the density of surface alkaline active sites. This enhancement is likely to induce alkalization of the interfacial water layer, thereby potentially accelerating H2S dissociation into HS and subsequently facilitating its oxidative conversion to elemental sulfur via reaction with oxygen. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Sciences)
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18 pages, 3864 KB  
Article
Tuning the Hydrogen Evolution Activity of Co2NiO4 via Precursor-Controlled Synthesis
by Abu Talha Aqueel Ahmed, Momin M. Mujtaba, Kafeel Ahmed Tufail Ahmed, Abu Saad Ansari, Sangeun Cho, Youngmin Lee, Sejoon Lee and Sankar Sekar
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(3), 1584; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27031584 - 5 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 700
Abstract
The realization of efficient and durable earth-abundant electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is critical for scalable hydrogen production, yet remains limited by insufficient intrinsic activity. Herein, we demonstrate a precursor-controlled hydrothermal strategy that enables precise morphology and surface-state regulation of spinel [...] Read more.
The realization of efficient and durable earth-abundant electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is critical for scalable hydrogen production, yet remains limited by insufficient intrinsic activity. Herein, we demonstrate a precursor-controlled hydrothermal strategy that enables precise morphology and surface-state regulation of spinel Co2NiO4 directly grown on nickel foam, allowing a clear correlation between catalyst architecture and HER performance. By replacing urea with hexamethylenetetramine, an ultrathin, highly interconnected two-dimensional nanosheet network (CNO-HT) is obtained, which promotes efficient electron transport, rapid electrolyte penetration, and maximized exposure of catalytically active sites. Structural and spectroscopic analyses confirm the formation of phase-pure cubic Co2NiO4 with enriched mixed-valence Ni and Co species, favoring enhanced redox activity. The CNO-HT catalyst exhibits a low overpotential (86 mV at 10 mA cm−2) and a smaller Tafel slope (103 mV dec−1), significantly outperforming the urea-derived counterpart. Importantly, the catalyst maintains stable HER operation for 96 h at both 10 and 100 mA cm−2, with post-stability electrochemical analyses confirming preserved kinetics and interfacial properties. This work establishes precursor-regulated nanosheet engineering as general and scalable strategy to unlock the intrinsic catalytic potential of spinel metal oxides, offering actionable design principles for next-generation non-noble electrocatalysts for alkaline hydrogen production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Materials for Water Splitting)
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16 pages, 3007 KB  
Article
Morphology-Driven Enhancement of Alkaline OER Performance in Spinel NiCo2O4 Nanosheet Electrodes
by Abu Talha Aqueel Ahmed, Abu Saad Ansari, Sangeun Cho and Atanu Jana
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(3), 1444; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27031444 - 31 Jan 2026
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 874
Abstract
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a critical anodic process in alkaline water electrolysis, and its catalytic performance can be effectively regulated through rational morphology engineering that governs active-site exposure, mass transport, and charge-transfer kinetics. Herein, we report a precursor-controlled synthesis of spinel [...] Read more.
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a critical anodic process in alkaline water electrolysis, and its catalytic performance can be effectively regulated through rational morphology engineering that governs active-site exposure, mass transport, and charge-transfer kinetics. Herein, we report a precursor-controlled synthesis of spinel NiCo2O4 (NCO) catalysts with tunable two-dimensional architectures for efficient alkaline OER. By employing hexamethylenetetramine (H) and urea (U) as precipitating agents, the NiCo2O4 catalysts with distinctly different nanosheet morphologies were directly grown on nickel foam. The NCO-H catalyst exhibits substantially enhanced OER activity by achieving lower overpotential of 259 mV, a smaller Tafel slope of 84 mV dec−1, and higher turnover frequency compared to NCO-U catalyst. The superior OER performance is attributed to an ultrathin, highly interconnected nanosheet network that provides abundant accessible active sites, shortened ion-diffusion pathways, and accelerated interfacial charge transfer. Moreover, the optimized electrode demonstrates excellent durability (50 h) with negligible potential degradation after the partial surface transformation into an oxyhydroxide-rich active phase, while post-stability polarization and impedance analyses confirm the preservation of catalytic integrity. These findings highlight precursor-regulated morphology engineering as an effective strategy for optimizing the electrocatalytic performance of spinel oxides and establish NiCo2O4 as a robust, earth-abundant OER catalyst for alkaline water-splitting applications. Full article
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Article
Nitrogen-Doped Biochar Derived from Starch for Enzyme-Free Colorimetric Detection of Uric Acid in Human Body Fluids
by Feihua Ye, Fan Chen, Yunhong Zhang, Yunwei Huang, Shasha Liu, Jiangfei Cao and Yanni Wu
Polymers 2026, 18(1), 146; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18010146 - 5 Jan 2026
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Abstract
Uric acid (UA), a key end-product of human purine metabolism, serves as an important biomarker linked to multiple disorders. This study developed a novel enzyme-free colorimetric sensing platform based on starch-derived nitrogen-doped biochar (NC) for the highly sensitive and selective detection of UA [...] Read more.
Uric acid (UA), a key end-product of human purine metabolism, serves as an important biomarker linked to multiple disorders. This study developed a novel enzyme-free colorimetric sensing platform based on starch-derived nitrogen-doped biochar (NC) for the highly sensitive and selective detection of UA in human body fluids. The NC material with a high specific surface area and abundant nitrogen active sites was prepared via a two-step strategy involving hydrothermal synthesis followed by high-temperature pyrolysis, using starch and urea as raw materials. Under mild conditions, the NC effectively catalyzes dissolved oxygen to produce reactive oxygen species (·O2 and 1O2), which oxidize 3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) to a blue-colored oxidation product (TMBox). The presence of UA reduces TMBox to colorless TMB, leading to a measurable decrease in absorbance at 652 nm and enabling quantitative UA detection. Key reaction conditions were systematically optimized. Material characterization and mechanistic investigations confirmed the catalytic performance of the NC. The method demonstrated a wide linear response from 10 to 500 μmol·L−1, with a detection limit of 4.87 μmol·L−1, and demonstrated outstanding selectivity, stability, and reproducibility. Practical application in human serum and urine samples yielded results consistent with clinical reference ranges, and spike-recovery rates ranged from 95.5% to 103.6%, indicating great potential for real-sample analysis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biobased and Biodegradable Polymers)
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