Feb 15, 2015

This week in Nano: Week 7(Feb 9th-Feb 15th)



An overview of a very specific application of nanomaterials was recently highlighted by a nice article in Nanowerk: ‘Nanotechnology andnanomaterials for camouflage and stealth applications’ This article  highlights nanomaterials as one of the emerging materials suitable for 'multi-spectral camouflage/stealth applications owing to their response to electromagnetic radiation of different energies'. They also highlight that the stealth coating technology mimics the active camouflage used by the squid. 


 

More applications of nanomaterials: A paper was published by PetroleumScience and Technology recently investigating the application of nanomaterials to boost oil extraction. The paper describes the use of fumed silica (AEROSIL® 200) to prevent adsorption of surfactant on reservoir rocks during oil extraction. Surfactant is injected into site during oil extraction to change properties of the reservoir rock and fluid and thus making extraction easier. Adsorption of the surfactant on the surface of reservoir rock is a problem during oil extraction. This paper investigates this issue examining the use of Aerosil 200 prevent the adsorption of surfactant on the reservoir rock.  The article is pay walled so can’t see if it was nano silica or what exactly the material was but the news article can be found here.


To end this weeks nano reading the nanotox paper (published Jan 2015) Toxicity of particulate matter from incineration of nanowaste (open access) is worth highlighting.  The paper exams oxidative potential (as measured by reactive oxygen species consumption of ascorbic acid, dithiothreitol, glutathione, or uric acid antioxidants) and toxicity (as measured by cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of PM to A549 human lung epithelial cells) of PM resulting from the incineration of pure nanomaterials and of paper and plastic wastes containing Ag, NiO, TiO2, ceria, C60, Fe2O3, or CdSe/ZnS quantum dots (CdSe QD). The results reported that in most cases ( see paper)  the presence of nanomaterials in the waste did not significantly affect the oxidation potential of the PM and did not significantly modify the cytotoxicity or genotoxicity of the PM.