3 research outputs found

    Release and toxicity comparison between industrial- and sunscreen-derived nano-ZnO particles

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    Many consumer products containing ZnO have raised concern for safety in regard to environmental impact and the public health. Widely used sunscreens for protecting against UV and avoiding sunburns represent a great exposure to nano-ZnO, one of the ingredients commonly applied in sunscreens. Applying nanoproducts on beaches may release nanoparticles unintentionally into the ocean. Despite the accumulation of such nanoproducts in the ocean harming or being detrimental to critical marine organisms, few studies have investigated the release and potential toxicity of nanoparticles extracted from products and compared them with those from industrial-type nanoparticles. Results show that the cytotoxicity of both industrial- and sunscreen-derived nano-ZnO to the marine diatom algae, Thalassiosira pseudonana, increased as exposure increases over time, as measured by growth inhibition (%) of the algae at a constant concentration of nano-ZnO (10 mg/L). The extent of toxicity appeared to be higher from industrial-type nano-ZnO compared with sunscreen-extracted nano-ZnO, though the extent becomes similar when concentrations increase to 50 mg/L. On the other hand, at a fixed exposure time of 48 h, the cytotoxicity increases as concentrations increase with the higher toxicity shown from the industrial-type compared with sunscreen-induced nano-ZnO. Results indicate that while industrial-type nano-ZnO shows higher toxicity than sunscreen-derived nano-ZnO, the release and extent of toxicity from nano-ZnO extracted from sunscreen are not trivial and should be monitored for the development of safe manufacturing of nanomaterials-induced products

    Mechanistic, mechanistic-based empirical, and continuum-based concepts and models for the transport of polyelectrolyte-modified nanoscale zerovalent iron (NZVI) in saturated porous media

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    Controlled emplacement of polyelectrolyte-modified NZVI at a high particle concentration (1–10 g/L) is needed for effective in situ subsurface remediation. For this reason, a modeling tool capable of predicting polyelectrolyte-modified NZVI transport is imperative. However, the deep bed filtration theory is invalid for this purpose because several phenomena governing the transport of polyelectrolyte-modified NZVI in saturated porous media, including detachment, particle agglomeration, straining, and porous media ripening, violate the fundamental assumption of such a classical theory. Thus, this chapter critically reviews the literature of each phenomenon with various kinds of nanoparticles with a special focus on polyelectrolyte-modified NZVI. Then, each phenomenon is elaborated using three kinds of mathematical models, including mechanistic (such as extended DLVO theory), mechanistic-based empirical (correlations to predict NZVI agglomeration and deposition), and continuum-based (Eulerian continuum-based models). These proposed modeling tools can be applied at various scales from column experiments (1-D) to field-scaled operations (3-D) for designing NZVI injection and emplacement in the subsurface
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