A new study by a team at Tohoku University, published in Chemical Engineering Journal on April 6, 2026, has shown that more isn't always better when it comes to nanoscale chemical reactions. You might think that giving reactants completely unrestricted access to a speed-boosting catalyst would be the fastest way to drive a chemical reaction. Instead, it was shown that hollow nanoreactors can work more efficiently when transport into the reaction space is slightly restricted.
A nanoreactor is a porous shell that surrounds an inner space containing catalytically active nanoparticles. The inner space where reactions occur provides a special environment which opens the door for unique and highly useful chemical reactions. Finding ways to optimize reactions in these confined spaces could help to produce a myriad of everyday products more efficiently, and at a lower price. While it might seem like flooding this inner space would get things done the fastest, researchers found that the key to optimization involved holding back a little.
"The result is surprising because intuitively, chemical reactions are thought to speed up when more reactants can reach the catalyst quickly," Tom Welling (Tohoku University) explains. "But this work points to a more subtle rule."
When transport is only slightly limited, the flow of molecules into the hollow space can be better matched to how quickly the catalyst itself can process them. Rather than overwhelming or underusing the catalytic sites, the nanoreactor facilitates a more favorable balance between reactant supply and reaction kinetics. In other words, the fastest nanoreactor is not always the one that lets all reactants in as quickly as possible, but it is instead the one that restricts access just enough to keep the reaction running smoothly.
"More isn't always better. Putting more cars on the road doesn't necessarily get people around the city faster - it creates traffic jams," says Kanako Watanabe (Tohoku University). "In the case of nanoreactors, traffic jams occur not at red lights, but when reactants are waiting for catalytic sites to open up. Limiting transport appropriately means that sites for the reaction are more accessible, and never get blocked. The flow of 'traffic' is maintained."
This new insight has the potential to be used beyond the model in this study, as a blueprint for other nanoreactors. By designing shells that precisely tune reactant transport instead of simply maximizing it, catalysts that use less precious metal and deliver higher efficiency can be synthesized. By showing that a bit of restriction can actually improve performance, the study offers a fresh design principle: smart control over reactant access can be just as important as the catalyst itself.