Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure

Silver nanoparticles (nanosilver) are gaining significant attention from the academic and regulatory communities, not only because of their antimicrobial effects and subsequent product applications, but also because of their potential health and environmental impacts. Although some human health effe...

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Main Author: Quadros, Marina E.
Other Authors: Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39128
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08132012-130211/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-391282020-09-26T05:34:25Z Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure Quadros, Marina E. Environmental Engineering Marr, Linsey C. Hochella, Michael F. Jr. Vikesland, Peter J. Little, John C. silver nanosilver nanoparticle leaching exposure dissolution aerosol children consumer products Silver nanoparticles (nanosilver) are gaining significant attention from the academic and regulatory communities, not only because of their antimicrobial effects and subsequent product applications, but also because of their potential health and environmental impacts. Although some human health effects of silver nanoparticles have been reported, realistic exposure levels from the use of consumer products are still largely unknown. The objective of this work was to characterize the release of silver and silver- containing particles during the normal use of silver nanotechnology consumer products. Specific objectives were to review the environmental and human health risks of airborne, engineered nanoparticles, to characterize aerosol emissions from nanosilver spray products, and to characterize nanosilver that may be released from childrenʼs consumer products under conditions of normal use. We identified possible routes of aerosolization of nanosilver from the production, use, and disposal of consumer products and estimated that about 14% of silver nanotechnology products that have been inventoried could potentially release silver particles into the air during use. The spray products investigated emitted 0.24 â 56 ng of silver in aerosols per spray action, and the plurality of aerosols were 1 â 2.5 μm in diameter, easily inhaled, for two products. Both the productsʼ liquid characteristics and the bottlesʼ spraying mechanisms played roles in determining the aerosol size distributions, but the size of silver-containing aerosols was largely independent of the liquid phase size distributions. We compiled an inventory of 82 children's consumer products that claim to contain nanosilver, of which 13 products were examined for presence of silver and tested for release of silver into liquid media and air, and onto skin. All products contained some form of silver, but silver-containing particles were observed in only four products, with sizes ranging from nanoscale up to 10 μm in size. Silver leached preferably into synthetic biological media with higher chloride concentrations, such as sweat and urine. We determined that levels of silver to which children would be exposed during normal use of these products are likely to be low, and bioavailable silver is expected to be in ionic rather than particulate form. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:17:39Z 2014-03-14T21:17:39Z 2012-08-02 2012-08-13 2012-09-19 2012-09-19 Dissertation etd-08132012-130211 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39128 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08132012-130211/ Quadros_ME_D_2012.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic silver
nanosilver
nanoparticle
leaching
exposure
dissolution
aerosol
children
consumer products
spellingShingle silver
nanosilver
nanoparticle
leaching
exposure
dissolution
aerosol
children
consumer products
Quadros, Marina E.
Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure
description Silver nanoparticles (nanosilver) are gaining significant attention from the academic and regulatory communities, not only because of their antimicrobial effects and subsequent product applications, but also because of their potential health and environmental impacts. Although some human health effects of silver nanoparticles have been reported, realistic exposure levels from the use of consumer products are still largely unknown. The objective of this work was to characterize the release of silver and silver- containing particles during the normal use of silver nanotechnology consumer products. Specific objectives were to review the environmental and human health risks of airborne, engineered nanoparticles, to characterize aerosol emissions from nanosilver spray products, and to characterize nanosilver that may be released from childrenʼs consumer products under conditions of normal use. We identified possible routes of aerosolization of nanosilver from the production, use, and disposal of consumer products and estimated that about 14% of silver nanotechnology products that have been inventoried could potentially release silver particles into the air during use. The spray products investigated emitted 0.24 â 56 ng of silver in aerosols per spray action, and the plurality of aerosols were 1 â 2.5 μm in diameter, easily inhaled, for two products. Both the productsʼ liquid characteristics and the bottlesʼ spraying mechanisms played roles in determining the aerosol size distributions, but the size of silver-containing aerosols was largely independent of the liquid phase size distributions. We compiled an inventory of 82 children's consumer products that claim to contain nanosilver, of which 13 products were examined for presence of silver and tested for release of silver into liquid media and air, and onto skin. All products contained some form of silver, but silver-containing particles were observed in only four products, with sizes ranging from nanoscale up to 10 μm in size. Silver leached preferably into synthetic biological media with higher chloride concentrations, such as sweat and urine. We determined that levels of silver to which children would be exposed during normal use of these products are likely to be low, and bioavailable silver is expected to be in ionic rather than particulate form. === Ph. D.
author2 Environmental Engineering
author_facet Environmental Engineering
Quadros, Marina E.
author Quadros, Marina E.
author_sort Quadros, Marina E.
title Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure
title_short Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure
title_full Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure
title_fullStr Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure
title_full_unstemmed Release of Silver from Nanotechnology Consumer Products and Potential for Human Exposure
title_sort release of silver from nanotechnology consumer products and potential for human exposure
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39128
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08132012-130211/
work_keys_str_mv AT quadrosmarinae releaseofsilverfromnanotechnologyconsumerproductsandpotentialforhumanexposure
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