TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanostructured materials for efficient microplastic cleanup from soil and water
T2 - current trends and future prospects
AU - Dey, Nibedita
AU - Ganesan, Swamynathan
AU - Gnanasekaran, Lalitha
AU - Mujahid Alam, Mohammed
AU - Al-Sehemi, Abdullah G.
AU - Rajamohan, Rajaram
AU - Mukunthan, K. S.
AU - Sundaram, Thanigaivel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Microplastics (MPs) and their nano-scale counterparts (Nanoplastics, NPs) have emerged as persistent pollutants in both terrestrial and aquatic environments, posing significant risks to ecological systems and human health. The development of engineered nanomaterials offers a promising path for effective remediation of these contaminants due to their high surface area, catalytic activity, and adaptability. This review provides a comprehensive evaluation of current nanomaterial-based strategies employed for the removal of MPs from soil and aqueous systems. Reported recovery rates for these systems range from 80% to 100%, with zinc-based hybrids demonstrating complete recovery under optimized conditions. More realistic MPs removal comparisons by nanosystems need to be established by experiments in more complex ecologically mimicking habitats. The review also assesses the scalability, material recovery, environmental safety, and operational efficiency of these technologies, which is a novelty of this article. By synthesizing current findings, this study outlines both the technical strengths and existing limitations of nanomaterial-enabled remediation systems, offering insight into future directions for engineered solutions in environmental microplastic mitigation.
AB - Microplastics (MPs) and their nano-scale counterparts (Nanoplastics, NPs) have emerged as persistent pollutants in both terrestrial and aquatic environments, posing significant risks to ecological systems and human health. The development of engineered nanomaterials offers a promising path for effective remediation of these contaminants due to their high surface area, catalytic activity, and adaptability. This review provides a comprehensive evaluation of current nanomaterial-based strategies employed for the removal of MPs from soil and aqueous systems. Reported recovery rates for these systems range from 80% to 100%, with zinc-based hybrids demonstrating complete recovery under optimized conditions. More realistic MPs removal comparisons by nanosystems need to be established by experiments in more complex ecologically mimicking habitats. The review also assesses the scalability, material recovery, environmental safety, and operational efficiency of these technologies, which is a novelty of this article. By synthesizing current findings, this study outlines both the technical strengths and existing limitations of nanomaterial-enabled remediation systems, offering insight into future directions for engineered solutions in environmental microplastic mitigation.
KW - adsorbents
KW - Microplastics (MPs)
KW - nanomaterials
KW - photocatalysis
KW - remediation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105026354985
U2 - 10.1080/17518253.2025.2605428
DO - 10.1080/17518253.2025.2605428
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105026354985
SN - 1751-8253
VL - 19
JO - Green Chemistry Letters and Reviews
JF - Green Chemistry Letters and Reviews
IS - 1
M1 - 2605428
ER -