Functionalized polyurethane foams (PUF) with hierarchical porosity are architected multifunctional platforms that can be transformed into advanced task-specific materials towards waste management, energy harvesting, and biomedical applications. Strategic incorporation of inorganic nanofillers (silica, nanoclays, metal/metal-oxide nanoparticles), carbonaceous phases (graphene), bio-based components (biopolymers, carbohydrates, castor-oil derivatives, melamine), and organophosphorus motifs enables targeted performance enhancements. Advanced fabrication routes such as in situ green synthesis, layer-by-layer assembly, and 3D printing provide hierarchical control over cell morphology and functional domain distribution. These strategies unlock PU foams as versatile substrates for heavy-metal sorption, oil-water separation, gas/volatile organic compound capture, tissue engineering, wound healing, piezoresistive sensing, shape-memory actuation, and triboelectric energy harvesting. Composite-driven, data-guided design positions PU foams as sustainable, "smart" platforms for next-generation technologies, paving the way for scalable, adaptive materials systems.
Singh et al. (Fri,) studied this question.