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From 2020science: Ten years ago to the month, one of the first research reports detailing the challenges of ensuring the safe use of engineered nanomaterials was delivered to the UK Health and Safety Executive. The report wasn’t for general release, and you’ll be hard pressed to find a copy of it in the public domain. But as a ...
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From 2020science.org:Introducing MINChar—a new community initiative to support effective material characterization in nanotoxicity studies.
Here’s
a tough one: Imagine you have a new substance—call it substance X—and
you run some tests to see how toxic it is. But you’re not quite sure
what substance X is.
You
know that it is a ...
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From 2020science:
Nanotechnology—like
other emerging technologies—presents a dilemma: If you're making new
substances with uncertain health risks, how low is low enough when it
comes to managing exposure?
The issue is raised in the current edition of Nature Nanotechnology by Vladimir Murashov of the National Institute for Occupational ...
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From 2020science.org:
First impressions of the ICON EHS Database Analysis Tool
What do you do this holiday season when the turkey’s lost its
appeal, you’ve seen every movie worth watching ten times over, and
conversational déjà-vu sets in? If you are really desperate, you could
play “nano-trivia”—and thanks to the fine folks at ...
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From 2020science.org:The Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution report on Novel Materials
Imagine for one naïve moment that we have a pretty good handle on
managing the environmental impact of existing manufactured “stuff”.
Then someone comes along and invents some “new stuff” that behaves very
differently from the “old stuff.”
How ...
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From 2020Science.org:
Twelve months ago today I held a bag of multi-walled carbon nanotubes up
before a hearing of the U.S. House Science Committee. I wanted to
emphasize the discrepancy between the current state of the science on
carbon nanotubes, and a tendency to classify this substance as the
relatively benign material graphite from ...
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$38 million! The number keeps floating before my eyes; a retinal imprint from the press release. $38 million for nanotechnology environmental impact research, courtesy of the folks at the U.S. National Science Foundation and Environmental Protection Agency. $38 million to be spent over the next five years on addressing the ...
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The SafeNANO blog is no stranger to the use (and possible abuse) of nanometre-scale silver—products ranging from silver-enhanced socks and toothpaste to plush toys and cure-alls have all appeared in the spotlight recently. With each passing month, the number of nano-silver gizmos on the market is growing. Back in March 2006 when the ...
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Amidst the cacophony of debate swirling around the true meaning of nanotechnology, I head a voice or reason last week. The voice was that of Dr. Bernd Sachweh of BASF, speaking at the European Aerosol Conference in Thessoloniki.I paraphrase, but the essence of Bernd’s point was this:‘Nano’ is not a thing or a product. It has no ...
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How cool is this: A nanotech-enabled labcoat to protect the user against… well, nanomaterials presumably, amongst other things! The labcoat—which uses Nanotex technology to make it stain resistant—is part of a major update to the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies Consumer Products Inventory that tracks manufacture-identified ...
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