“…The dominant physicochemical properties of TiO 2 nanostructures are classi-ed in terms of their crystallinity, purity, structure, chemical composition, size-and/or shape-distribution, dimensionality and defect centres, which can be easily modied by changing the parameters during various synthetic methods. TiO 2 nanostructures have been widely explored owing to their extensive applications across a myriad of areas, particularly in photocatalysis, including those for the decomposition of organic/ inorganic dyes, 16,23,[36][37][38][39][40] hydrogen production from water, [41][42][43][44] removal of pollutants and plastics from the environment, [45][46][47][48] dye-sensitized solar cells, 49 sensors, 50 sunscreens, [51][52][53][54] paints, 55,56 rechargeable batteries, [57][58][59] supercapacitors, 60 food colouring, [61][62][63][64] environmental remediation and biomedical elds. 95,96 Over the past few decades, extensive research effort has been dedicated to the engineering of TiO 2 nanostructures synthesized via chemical routes, such as sol-gel, [97][98][99][100][101][102][103][104]…”