TY - JOUR
T1 - Advancements in Single-Atom Catalysts
T2 - Synthesis, Characterization, and Applications in Sensing Technologies
AU - Arivuthilagam, Ilakeya Subbiah
AU - Shahid, Raghisa
AU - Rahman, Md Mahbubur
AU - Lee, Jae Joon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Small Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have rapidly progressed from early proof-of-concept studies to high-performance sensing platforms. Their atomically dispersed active sites and tunable coordination environments, offer superior catalytic activity and selectivity compared with conventional nanocatalysts. Recent advances in support engineering, spanning carbon nanomaterials, metal oxides, and metal organic frameworks have enabled precise control over SAC composition, electronic structure, and stability under complex operating conditions. This review summarizes the current state of SAC research from three complementary perspectives. First, it compare top-down and bottom-up synthesis strategies, emphasizing scalable approaches that preserve single-atom dispersion. Second, it outlines the characterization techniques, highlighting how advanced spectroscopy, microscopy, and theoretical calculations are integrated to correlate coordination environments with catalytic performance. Third, it discusses emerging sensing applications including biosensing, environmental monitoring, gas and electrochemiluminescence detection, and photoelectrochemical analysis where SAC-based materials achieve record-low detection limits. Despite significant advancements, key challenges remain: (i) preventing atom aggregation under harsh electrochemical conditions, (ii) integrating SACs into miniaturized devices, and (iii) establishing standardized metrics that bridge theoretical predictions and practical performance. This review concludes that addressing these issues will advance SACs toward real-time sensing, with multi-atom cooperative sites and AI-assisted catalyst design as promising strategies to unlock their full potential in next-generation analytical platforms.
AB - Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have rapidly progressed from early proof-of-concept studies to high-performance sensing platforms. Their atomically dispersed active sites and tunable coordination environments, offer superior catalytic activity and selectivity compared with conventional nanocatalysts. Recent advances in support engineering, spanning carbon nanomaterials, metal oxides, and metal organic frameworks have enabled precise control over SAC composition, electronic structure, and stability under complex operating conditions. This review summarizes the current state of SAC research from three complementary perspectives. First, it compare top-down and bottom-up synthesis strategies, emphasizing scalable approaches that preserve single-atom dispersion. Second, it outlines the characterization techniques, highlighting how advanced spectroscopy, microscopy, and theoretical calculations are integrated to correlate coordination environments with catalytic performance. Third, it discusses emerging sensing applications including biosensing, environmental monitoring, gas and electrochemiluminescence detection, and photoelectrochemical analysis where SAC-based materials achieve record-low detection limits. Despite significant advancements, key challenges remain: (i) preventing atom aggregation under harsh electrochemical conditions, (ii) integrating SACs into miniaturized devices, and (iii) establishing standardized metrics that bridge theoretical predictions and practical performance. This review concludes that addressing these issues will advance SACs toward real-time sensing, with multi-atom cooperative sites and AI-assisted catalyst design as promising strategies to unlock their full potential in next-generation analytical platforms.
KW - biosensor
KW - environmental monitoring
KW - heterogeneous catalysis
KW - single-atom catalyst
KW - support engineering
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105021267176
U2 - 10.1002/smsc.202500449
DO - 10.1002/smsc.202500449
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105021267176
SN - 2688-4046
VL - 5
JO - Small Science
JF - Small Science
IS - 12
M1 - e202500449
ER -