Title: Nanoparticles in the environment
1Nanoparticles in the environment how small is
the risk?
- Anders Baun
- Nanna Hartmann
- Khara Grieger
- Michael Andersen
- Steffen Foss Hansen
2Is nanotechnology dangerous?
No!
3Nano is not one thing!
4Where is the nano?
- No exposure no risk of toxic effects
- Nano is many things
- If we dont know where it is to begin with how
can we know where it ends up? - Location of the nanostructure!
5(No Transcript)
6Surface
- Structured on the nanoscale same material
- Nanoscale thickness,
- unpatterned film
- Patterned film
- Film at nanoscale in thickness
- Surface pattern having nanoscale dimensions
7Particles
8Categorization of the 243 consumer products in
the DK market
9Expected exposures
Stuer-Lauridsen et al. (2007).
10Nano is not one thing!
Nanoparticles
- Natural gtlt Anthropogenic gtlt Engineered
11Ecotoxicity of nanoparticles
- Ecotoxicity towards base set organisms
- Fish
- Crustacean
- Algae
12Environmentally problematic?
- Designed to last Persistent?
- Penetrates biological membranes
Bio-accumulative? - Biologically active Toxic?
- Carriers of heavy metals and POPs?
- Extremely mobile
- Difficult to detect
PBT and mobile?!
13Environmental impacts what makes nano special?
- Properties change at nano-scale reactivity vs.
surface area - Environmental impacts change?
- Which impacts?
- Are existing methods for evaluation of fate and
effects adequate? - Dissolved or particulate?
14Nanoparticles and Ecotoxicity the beginning
- Juvenile largemouth bass exposed to fullerenes
- Concentrations 0.5 and 1 ppm
- Duration 48 h
- Results Significant increase in lipid
peroxidation of the brain - Problem Solvent content (THF)
Oberdörster (2004). Environ Health Perspect
1121058-1062
15Before the beginningC60 in water how...?
2 months
Photos by Sara Sørensen, Rikke Rasmussen, Nanna
Hartmann
16TEM images of suspensions
In water Not free nanoparticles
TEM analysis by Christian Bender Koch, KU LIFE
17Comparing the toxicity to B. subtilis of four
differently prepared nC60 water suspensions
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
Minimum inhibitory conc. (mg/L)
0.4
0.2
0.0
THF/nC
son/nC
aq/nC
PVP/C60
60
60
60
- Controls with solvents other ingredients showed
no toxicity
Lyon et al. (2006). EST 40, 4360-4366
18Different methods for making nC60 produce
different kinds of colloids
TTA/nC60
THF/nC60
Brant, J.A., Labuille, J., Bottero, J.Y.,
Wiesner, M.R., Langmuir, in press, 2006.
aqu/nC60
d
c
Son/nC60
19TiO2 in algal medium
- A) P. subcapitata
- B) TiO2 nanoparticles in algal medium
- AB
Hartmann (2007). M.Sc. Thesis.
20Characteristics relevant for hazard
identification of nanoparticles
Crystal structure
Shape
Surface chemistry
Surface charge
Adhesion
Size
Solubility
Hansen et al. (2007). Nanotoxicology (accepted)
21What has been characterized in toxicity studies?
Hansen et al. (2007). Nanotoxicology (accepted)
22Toxicity of nanoparticles and nanotubes How much
been tested?
Hansen et al. (2007). Nanotoxicology (accepted)
23Ecotoxicity!
Ecotoxicity!
24Algae
- C60
- We find up to 30 inhibition of algal growth at
35 mg/l - TiO2
- EC50 of 44 mg/l (25 nm TiO2)
- No toxicity of 100 nm TiO2 in conc. p to 50
mg/l - But we find
- EC50 7.5 mg/l for both
Andersen (2007). M.Sc. Thesis Hund-Rinke
Simon (2006). Environ Sci Pollut Res.
Hartmann (2007). M.Sc. Thesis.
25Crustacean
- Daphnia magna exposed to TiO2 and fullerenes
- Mortality C60 gt TiO2
- C60 50 dead at 0.46 mg/l
- TiO2 50 dead at 5.5 mg/l
- Disorientation
- TiO2
- No dose-response relationship (max conc. 3 mg/l)
Lovern Klaper (2006). Environ Toxicol Chem.
Hund-Rinke Simon (2006). Environ Sci
Pollut Res.
26Crustacean
Picture by Rosenkrantz (2006)
Picture by Hartmann (2007)
- Daphnids can modify the solubility of nanotubes
- (Roberts et al. (2007). EST, 41, 3025-3029)
27Fish
- SWCNT in juvenile rainbow trout resulted in
dose-dependent increases in - Ventilation rate
- Gill pathologies
- Mucus secretion
- Drinking behaviour
- Aggressive behavior
- Swellings on surfaces in the brain
- Cells in abnormal nuclear division in liver cells
- 35.6 lethal effect in embryos exposed to 39.4 nm
polystyrene nanoparticles at 30 mg/l
Smith et al. (2007). Aquatic Toxicol.,
Kashiwada (2006). Environ. Health Perspect.
28Fish
Kashiwada (2006). Environ. Health Perspect.,114,
1697-1702
29Developmental toxicity of nC60 (Zebrafish)
Mitigation by GSH suggest that toxicity is
related to oxidative stress
100
80
nC60/THF
nC60/THFGSH
60
Pericardial Edema ()
40
20
0
48
60
72
84
96
108
120
Zebrafish larva with pericardial edema due to
nC60 exposure
Hours Post-Fertilization
X. Zhu et al. (2007). Environ. Toxicol. Chem.
30Nanoparticles as contaminant carriers
31Why look at interaction?
- Risk assessment of nanoparticles
- No exposure No risk!
- Low exposure Low risk?
- Nanoparticles may act as carriers of contaminants
- C60 present Increased toxicity of phenanthrene
in algae and fish - TiO2 present Enhanced uptake of Cd in carp
Baun et al. (2007), Aquatic Toxicol.
(accepted) Zhang et al. (2007), Chemosphere,
67, 160-166
32Toxicity of phenanthrene towards algae
- nC60 6-8 mg/l (measured)
- Control 16 inhibition
- EC50,48h 720 µg/l 69175095
- EC50,48h 581 µg/l 53163595
- EC50,48h 427 µg/l 39346595
With nC60
Without nC60
Baun et al. (2007). Aquatic Toxicol. (accepted)
33Algal toxicity of Cd(II) expressed as Cd2
With TiO2
Without TiO2
EC50,48h 44 µg/l Cd2 394995 EC50,48h 7.5
µg/l Cd2 5.71095
Hartmann (2007). M.Sc. Thesis. Technical
University of Denmark
34Toxicity of Cd(II) in the presence of nanosized
TiO2
- Know your test system and the influence of TiO2
nanoparticles on toxicity can be predicted!
Hartmann (2007). M.Sc. Thesis. Technical
University of Denmark
35Conclusion
- Nano is not one thing!
- NPs are as different as ordinary chemicals
the extra nano dimension! - Effects have been observed in aquatic organisms
- Characterization in media and in vivo is lacking!
- The role of nanovectors is important in hazard
assessment - Potential environmental hazards must be
considered in developments of nanoproducts!
36Any Questions?