“…In the past decade, there are many halloysite-related works, such as halloysite-based adsorbents (Viseras et al, 2008;Zhao and Liu, 2008;Kiani et al, 2011;Kadi et al, 2012;Kiani, 2014), catalysts (Barrientos-Ramirez et al, 2009;, advanced ceramics (Fu and Zhang, 2005), polymer nanocomposites Pasbakhsh et al, 2013;Carli et al, 2014;Sarifuddin et al, 2014;Yang et al, 2014), hard template (Zhou et al, 2011), and drug loading and releasing (Tan et al, 2014). Nonetheless, the halloysite nanotubes (abbreviated as Hal hereafter) feature a solid tube wall of tens of nanometers in thickness, which restricts the Hal with a confined specific surface area S BET of around 50 m 2 /g .…”