TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanozymes for clean energy catalysis
T2 - unlocking potential, progress and perspectives
AU - Harshita, null
AU - Sastry, Murali
AU - Samudrala, Shanthi Priya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2026
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - The growing need for sustainable and efficient energy conversion has driven the development of advanced catalytic materials. In this quest, nanozymes—nanomaterials that mimic the catalytic functions of natural enzymes emerge as promising candidates due to their tunable catalytic properties, high operational stability, and cost-effectiveness. This review presents recent advancements in the applications of nanozymes for clean energy technologies, focusing on their mechanistic roles and engineering strategies within the scope of key reactions, including hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), oxygen evolution and reduction reactions (OER, ORR), CO2 reduction, biofuel production, and methane-to-methanol conversion. The fundamental classes of nanozymes, their structure–activity relationships, and how their fine-tuned properties aid energy conversion in systems such as biofuel cells, electrolyzers, and fuel cells are also discussed. To underscore their practical advantages, nanozymes are benchmarked against conventional catalysts using key performance metrics such as turnover frequency, cost, and stability. Additionally, the review addresses challenges associated with limited selectivity, incomplete mechanistic understanding, and scalability while also highlighting emerging technologies such as nanostructuring, doping, hybridization, and 3D printing. By mapping recent advances and identifying critical research gaps, this review underscores the potential of established nanozymes and nanozyme-inspired catalytic systems as next-generation catalysts for clean energy applications and their role in advancing the transition toward a carbon-neutral and circular energy economy.
AB - The growing need for sustainable and efficient energy conversion has driven the development of advanced catalytic materials. In this quest, nanozymes—nanomaterials that mimic the catalytic functions of natural enzymes emerge as promising candidates due to their tunable catalytic properties, high operational stability, and cost-effectiveness. This review presents recent advancements in the applications of nanozymes for clean energy technologies, focusing on their mechanistic roles and engineering strategies within the scope of key reactions, including hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), oxygen evolution and reduction reactions (OER, ORR), CO2 reduction, biofuel production, and methane-to-methanol conversion. The fundamental classes of nanozymes, their structure–activity relationships, and how their fine-tuned properties aid energy conversion in systems such as biofuel cells, electrolyzers, and fuel cells are also discussed. To underscore their practical advantages, nanozymes are benchmarked against conventional catalysts using key performance metrics such as turnover frequency, cost, and stability. Additionally, the review addresses challenges associated with limited selectivity, incomplete mechanistic understanding, and scalability while also highlighting emerging technologies such as nanostructuring, doping, hybridization, and 3D printing. By mapping recent advances and identifying critical research gaps, this review underscores the potential of established nanozymes and nanozyme-inspired catalytic systems as next-generation catalysts for clean energy applications and their role in advancing the transition toward a carbon-neutral and circular energy economy.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105023860248
U2 - 10.1039/d5nr04138d
DO - 10.1039/d5nr04138d
M3 - Review Article
C2 - 41351577
AN - SCOPUS:105023860248
SN - 2040-3364
VL - 18
SP - 1121
EP - 1156
JO - Nanoscale
JF - Nanoscale
IS - 3
ER -