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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 13-May-2026 08:16 ET (13-May-2026 12:16 GMT/UTC)
From field to filter: how modified agricultural waste can purify our water
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityWater pollution from industrial and agricultural activities poses a significant threat to human health and aquatic ecosystems worldwide. While various remediation techniques exist, many are expensive and complex, limiting their widespread use. A new comprehensive review published in Carbon Research explores a promising and sustainable solution: turning abundant agricultural waste into highly effective, low-cost adsorbents for cleaning contaminated water.
Raw agricultural wastes like straw, husks, and cobs naturally contain components that can bind to pollutants. However, their inherent structure often limits their capacity, making them inefficient in their natural state. This review synthesizes years of research on modifying these materials to dramatically enhance their ability to capture a wide range of contaminants, including heavy metals, dyes, pesticides, and antibiotics. By altering the physical and chemical properties of these wastes, scientists can create powerful, eco-friendly filters.
- Journal
- Carbon Research
- Funder
- National Natural Science Foundation of China, Science and Technology Program of Zhejiang Province, 111 Project, National Key Research and Development Program of China, China Agriculture Research System
Sticky shield: novel nanocomposite adheres to and protects electronics from electromagnetic pollution
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityAs our world becomes increasingly saturated with wireless communications, portable gadgets, and sensor arrays, a silent form of pollution is on the rise: electromagnetic (EM) interference. This "smog" of EM waves can disrupt the function of sensitive electronics, compromise data, and even pose potential health risks. To combat this, scientists are racing to develop new materials that can effectively shield devices, and a new study published in Carbon Research presents a promising and innovative solution.
Researchers have developed a novel nanocomposite material by combining reduced graphene oxide (rGO) with a specially modified adhesive polymer, Chloroprene grafted polymethyl methacrylate (CP-g-pMMA). This new material, rGO/CP-g-pMMA, is not only cost-effective and environmentally friendly to produce but also possesses a unique combination of properties that make it an ideal candidate for protecting the next generation of electronics.
- Journal
- Carbon Research
From hazardous waste to high-value energy storage: a new life for nickel-contaminated biochar
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityThe Challenge of Contaminated Biochar
Biochar, a charcoal-like material produced from plant matter, is a powerful tool for environmental cleanup. Its porous structure makes it an excellent adsorbent for removing toxic heavy metals like nickel from industrial wastewater. However, this process creates a new problem: what to do with the metal-laden, hazardous biochar? A new study published in Carbon Research offers an innovative solution, transforming this waste into a valuable component for energy storage devices.
- Journal
- Carbon Research
- Funder
- National Natural Science Foundation of China
From pollution to product: a new roadmap for upcycling plastics into valuable nanomaterials
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityA Blueprint for Turning Waste into Wealth
The ever-growing mountain of plastic waste poses a severe threat to global ecosystems. However, a comprehensive review published in Carbon Research provides a detailed roadmap for transforming this environmental menace into a source of high-tech materials. By analyzing the intrinsic structure of different plastics, researchers have outlined how to convert them into valuable carbon nanomaterials (CNMs), such as carbon nanotubes, graphene, and porous carbon, offering a promising "waste-to-wealth" strategy. This work synthesizes current knowledge to guide future research in tackling plastic pollution while advancing materials science.
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- Carbon Research
- Funder
- Australian Research Council
From waste to wattage: harnessing lignin for next-generation carbon materials
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityLignin, a major component of plants and a massive byproduct of the paper and biorefinery industries, is often discarded or burned as a low-grade fuel. However, this complex polymer is rich in carbon and has a unique aromatic structure, making it a prime candidate for creating high-value materials. A new review published in Carbon Research provides a comprehensive overview of the state-of-the-art science and technology for converting this abundant, renewable resource into advanced carbon materials with far-reaching applications in energy, catalysis, and environmental remediation.
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- Carbon Research
- Funder
- National Natural Science Foundation of China, Research and Development Program in Key Fields of Guangdong Province, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Resources Biorefinery
Nature's sponge: how organic matter in water controls tungsten pollution
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityTungsten (W), a metal widely used in industries from electronics to ammunition, is increasingly recognized as an environmental contaminant. Once it leaches into water systems, it can become highly mobile, potentially contaminating drinking water sources and posing health risks. In some areas, high levels of tungsten in aquifers have been linked to clusters of childhood leukemia. Despite these concerns, the environmental behavior of tungsten, particularly how it interacts with its surroundings, has remained poorly understood.
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- Carbon Research
- Funder
- National Natural Science Foundation of China
A new litmus test for climate models: C:N ratio offers crucial reality check for carbon sequestration estimates
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityA Fundamental Check on Climate Projections
In the global effort to combat climate change, accurately estimating how much carbon our planet's forests, soils, and grasslands can absorb is critical. These estimates, generated by complex terrestrial ecosystem models, inform international climate policy and carbon markets. However, a new perspective published in Carbon Research suggests a simple but powerful reality check for these models: the carbon-to-nitrogen (C:N) ratio. Researchers propose this fundamental ecological principle can be used to assess the rationality of carbon sequestration estimates and their associated nitrogen budgets.
- Journal
- Carbon Research
Predictable carbon creation: tailoring materials for specific pollutant removal
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural UniversityScientists have unlocked the secrets behind predictably synthesizing N/S co-doped microporous carbon, a highly effective adsorbent for environmental pollution control. This breakthrough allows for the precise tailoring of carbon materials for specific applications, moving beyond the traditional trial-and-error approach that has historically plagued material development. The study demonstrates that by understanding and manipulating key properties of carbonaceous precursors, researchers can direct the creation of carbons optimized for removing organic pollutants like bisphenol A (BPA) or heavy metals like lead (Pb2+).
- Journal
- Carbon Research
- Funder
- National & Local Joint Engineering Laboratory for Municipal Sewage Resource Utilization Technology, Suzhou University of Science and Technology, Shanghai Natural Science Foundation