Biomass-Derived Nanomaterials: Sustainable Production and Application
A special issue of Molecules (ISSN 1420-3049). This special issue belongs to the section "Nanochemistry".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 3 July 2025 | Viewed by 8939
Special Issue Editor
Interests: nanocellulose gels; Pickering emulsion gels; bio-based Pickering particles; nanotechnology; renewable materials; hydrogels; biopolymers
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Biomass is a renewable carbon-based residue/waste that is mainly generated from agroforestry sectors. The high abundance of biomass feedstocks includes forestry residues and wood waste, agricultural residues, dedicated energy crops, and organic fractions of municipal solid wastes, which are mainly composed of polysaccharides (starch/cellulose and hemicellulose) and aromatic polymers (lignin) that create 35–65% of organic carbon. Thus, biomass feedstock has attracted great interest as an alternative to petroleum feedstock for sustainable and green product development. Researchers and industrialists are highly focused on the R&D of biomass-derived nanomaterials, which aim to apply nanotechnology to the fields of materials and coatings; electronics; biomedicine; environment; energy; food science; etc. The superior characteristics of biomass-derived nanomaterials as synthetic nanomaterials include their mechanical strength with thermal stability; being light in weight; tunable optical transparency; electro-magnetic response; thermal conductivity; adsorption capacity; and tunable wettability. Most importantly, biomass-derived materials promise to have low toxicity, and to be biocompatible, sustainable, eco-friendly, greener, and a sophisticated application for human usage. To date, there are several types of biomass-derived nanomaterials that were successfully established, which include zero-dimensional (quantum dots), one-dimensional (nanotubes), two-dimensional (nanofibers), and three-dimensional (nanocrystals) nanomaterials. Although biomass-derived nanomaterials meet the green line of sustainable concern, the top-down production and processing of nanomaterials from complex biomass, as well as the challenge of nanomaterial application, toxicity, and environmental risk, are the major concerns of manufacturers and consumers. Hence, the aim of this Special Issue, “Biomass-derived Nanomaterials: Sustainable Production and Application”, is to provide potential readers with an overview of recent challenges and developments in the fields of biomass-derived nanomaterials, such as carbon nanotubes, nanocrystalline cellulose, nanofiber cellulose, lignin nanoparticles, starch nanostructures, etc.
Dr. Hwei Voon Lee
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- carbon nanotubes
- nanocellulose
- nanostructures
- lignin nanoparticles
- top-down approaches
- surface functionalization
- applications
- cytoxicity
- toxicology
- life-cycle assessment
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