“…In 1960, cobalt oxide was studied for the first time as a catalyst for the total oxidation of hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. 60 It was then studied for various applications, such as an active material in electrochromic devices (as it switches from intense brown in the oxidized state (colored state) to green in the reduced state (bleached state)), 27,61 solid-state gas sensors, 62 active and stable heterogeneous catalysts, 63 magnetoresistive devices, 64 as a negative electrode in rechargeable lithium batteries, 42 in water splitting, [65][66][67] as a sensor for determination of nitrite in wastewater, 68,69 acetaminophen detection in biological samples and commercial pharmaceutical preparations, 70 electrode material for the vanadium flow battery (VFB), 71 photoelectrochemical applications (PEC), 72 in the development of latent fingerprints, 73 to detect hydrogen peroxide in the nanomolar concentration range, 74 environmental remediation applications, such as the degradation of dyes, dye waste, and antibiotics, sodium-ion hybrid capacitors (SICs), 75 in diverse catalytic and biomedical applications due to its unique antimicrobial, anticancer, catalytic, antioxidant, antifungal, and enzyme inhibition properties, 76,77 an electrochemical sensor for simultaneous and selective determination of hydroquinone (HQ) and catechol (CT), 78 field effect transistors, 79 solar cells, 80 as a photocatalyst, 81 for anticancer treatment applications 82 and so on. Applications of Co 3 O 4 in various fields are listed in Fig.…”