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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecotoxicity of selected nano-materials to aquatic organisms.

TLDR
This initial investigation suggests that chemicals emerging from nanotechnology may pose a risk to aquatic life in water column and sediment compartments and that further studies on their adverse effects are to be encouraged.
Abstract
Present knowledge concerning the ecotoxic effects of nano-materials is very limited and merits to be documented more fully. For this purpose, we appraised the toxicity of nine metallic nano-powders (copper zinc iron oxide, nickel zinc iron oxide, yttrium iron oxide, titanium dioxide, strontium ferrite, indium tin oxide, samarium oxide, erbium oxide, and holmium oxide) and of two organic nano- powders (fullerene-C60 and single-walled carbon nanotube or SWCNT). After a simple process where nano-powders (NPs) were prepared in aqueous solution and filtered, they were then bioassayed across several taxonomic groups including decomposers (bacteria), primary producers (micro-algae), as well as primary and secondary consumers (micro-invertebrates and fish). Toxicity data generated on the 11 NPs reflected a wide spectrum of sensitivity that was biological level-, test-, and endpoint-specific. With all acute and chronic tests confounded for these 11 NPs, toxicity responses spanned over three orders of magnitude: >463 mg/L (24 h LC50 of the invertebrate Thamnoplatyurus platyurus for fullerene-C60) / 0.3 mg/L (96 h EC50 of the invertebrate Hydra attenuata for indium tin oxide), that is a ratio of 1543. On the basis of the MARA (Microbial Array for Risk Assessment) assay toxic fingerprint concept, it is intimated that NPs may have different modes of toxic action. When mixed in a 1:1 ratio with a certified reference material (CRM) sediment, two solid phase assays and an elutriate assay, respectively, showed that five NPs (copper zinc iron oxide, samarium oxide, erbium oxide, holmium oxide, and SWCNT) were able to increase both CRM sediment toxicity and its elutriate toxicity. This initial investigation suggests that chemicals emerging from nanotechnology may pose a risk to aquatic life in water column and sediment compartments and that further studies on their adverse effects are to be encouraged.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hexagonal ferrites: A review of the synthesis, properties and applications of hexaferrite ceramics

TL;DR: The most important members of the hexaferrite family are shown below, where Me = a small 2+ ion such as cobalt, nickel, or zinc, and Ba can be substituted by Sr: • M-type ferrites, such as BaFe12O19 (BaM or barium ferrite), SrFe 12O19(SrM or strontium ferite), and cobalt-titanium substituted M ferrite, Sr- or BaFe 12−2xCoxTixO19, or CoTiM as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toxicity of Ag, CuO and ZnO nanoparticles to selected environmentally relevant test organisms and mammalian cells in vitro: a critical review

TL;DR: The toxic range of all the three metal-containing NPs to target- and non-target organisms overlaps, indicating that the leaching of biocidal NPs from consumer products should be addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

From ecotoxicology to nanoecotoxicology.

TL;DR: This review evaluated the currently existing literature data on toxicity (L(E)C50 values) of synthetic NPs in environmentally relevant species to identify tentatively most harmful NPs and most sensitive organism groups, and to provide relevant ecotoxicological information for further risk assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanomaterials in the construction industry: A review of their applications and environmental health and safety considerations

TL;DR: In this paper, state-of-the-art applications of nanomaterials that improve conventional construction materials, suggest likely environmental release scenarios, and summarize potential adverse biological and toxicological effects and their mitigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review on application of photocatalysis for toxicity reduction of real wastewaters

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of recent studies concerned with photocatalytic detoxification of real industrial and municipal wastewater were assembled and critically discussed, such issues as challenges for application of photocatalyst-based wastewater detoxification, feasibility of various toxicity tests, reuse of photocATalysts, cost estimation, etc.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Do nanoparticles present ecotoxicological risks for the health of the aquatic environment

TL;DR: A precautionary approach is required with individual evaluation of new nanomaterials for risk to the health of the environment and current toxicity testing protocols should be generally applicable to identify harmful effects associated with nanoparticles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acute toxicological effects of copper nanoparticles in vivo.

TL;DR: Results indicate a gender dependent feature of nanotoxicity andKidney, liver and spleen are found to be target organs of nano-copper particles.
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Toxicity of titanium dioxide nanoparticles to rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss): gill injury, oxidative stress, and other physiological effects.

TL;DR: The toxicity of TiO2 NPs to the main body systems of rainbow trout is described to conclude that titanium dioxide nanoparticles are not a major ionoregulatory toxicant, or haemolytic, at the concentration and exposure times used.
Journal ArticleDOI

Daphnia magna mortality when exposed to titanium dioxide and fullerene (C60) nanoparticles

TL;DR: The main objective was to assess the potential impact that nanoparticles may have on release into aquatic environments and to identify the most appropriate nanotechnology to preserve the aquatic environment while advancing medical and environmental technology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Manufacture and use of nanomaterials: current status in the UK and global trends

TL;DR: An overview of the production and use of nanomaterials (NMs), particularly in the UK, is provided, the main emphasis being the bulk markets in metals and metal oxides, and some niche markets such as carbon nanotubes and quantum dots.
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