N
Nora Savage
Researcher at United States Environmental Protection Agency
Publications - 22
Citations - 1728
Nora Savage is an academic researcher from United States Environmental Protection Agency. The author has contributed to research in topics: Societal impact of nanotechnology & Impact of nanotechnology. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 22 publications receiving 1593 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Nanomaterials and Water Purification: Opportunities and Challenges
TL;DR: In this paper, an overview of the use of nanomaterials in water purification can be found, highlighting recent advances on the development of novel nanoscale materials and processes for treatment of surface water, groundwater and industrial wastewater contaminated by toxic metal ions, radionuclides, organic and inorganic solutes, bacteria and viruses.
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Research strategies for safety evaluation of nanomaterials, part VII: evaluating consumer exposure to nanoscale materials.
Treye A. Thomas,Karluss Thomas,Nakissa Sadrieh,Nora Savage,Patricia Adair,Robert L. Bronaugh +5 more
TL;DR: This paper seeks to review a limited subset of products that contain nanoscale materials, assess the available data for evaluating the consumer exposures and potential hazards associated with these products, and discuss the capacity of U.S. regulatory agencies to address the potential risks associated withThese products.
Book
Nanotechnology Applications for Clean Water
TL;DR: Nanotechnology is already having a dramatic impact on research in water quality and Nanotechnology Applications for Clean Water highlights both the challenges and the opportunities for nanotechnology to positively influence this area of environmental protection.
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Nanoparticles and water quality
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Research Strategies for Safety Evaluation of Nanomaterials, Part VIII: International Efforts to Develop Risk-Based Safety Evaluations for Nanomaterials
TL;DR: The United States, Europe, and Japan have each initiated comprehensive programs to promote and expand the utility of nanotechnology for commercial applications, and the scope of each of these programs includes efforts to assess the hazards posed by nanomaterials in realistic exposure conditions.