Bioinspired Synthesis of Metal Oxide Nanoparticles and Their Applications: A Critical Review
Dushyant Chaudhary, Moudo Thiam, Vanessa de Oliveira Arnoldi Pellegrini, Igor PolikarpovMetal oxide nanoparticles serve as crucial drivers in modern biomedical, catalytic, environmental, and energy technologies due to their high surface-to-volume ratios and quantum confinement properties. Traditional chemical and physical synthesis methods remain limited by significant energy footprints, high costs, and the use of hazardous reagents. To address these challenges, bioinspired (“green”) synthesis has emerged as a sustainable paradigm that employs biological systems as nature nanofactories. This critical review provides a provides a comprehensive and systematic analysis of the green synthesis of major metal oxide systems (ZnO, TiO2, Fe3O4/Fe2O3, CuO, Co3O4, CeO2, and MnO2) using diverse biological templates, including plant extracts, bacteria, fungi, algae, and biopolymers. Moving beyond simple descriptive summaries, we critically evaluate the foundational electron-transfer and nucleation mechanism, systematically correlate processing parameters with physical outcomes, and offer a rigorous comparative analysis across different biological kingdoms. Finally, we directly address the underlying challenges facing the field: reproducibility bottlenecks, scalability limits, environmental safety variations, and regulatory hurdles necessary for industrial translation.